Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental lines of deposition in tooth dentin. Calculating this rate in several taxa allows for the study of the evolution of tooth replacement rate. Sauropod dinosaurs, the largest terrestrial animals that ever evolved, exhibited a diversity of tooth sizes and shapes, but little is known about their tooth replacement rates. Methodology/Principal Findings: We present tooth replacement rate, formation time, crown volume, total dentition volume, and enamel thickness for two coexisting but distantly related and morphologically disparate sauropod dinosaurs Camarasaurus and Diplodocus. Individual tooth formation time was determined by counting daily incremental...
Ornithopods were key herbivorous dinosaurs in Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems, with a variety of too...
<p>Tooth formation time (days) and replacement rate (1 tooth/X days) in <i>Diplodocus</i> (YPM 4677)...
<p>The Late Jurassic (Tithonian) Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania offered one of the richest sauropod faun...
Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
BACKGROUND: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting inc...
Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
© 2019 D’Emic et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Comm...
Tooth replacement rate is an important contributor to feeding ecology for polyphyodont animals. Dino...
<p>The Late Jurassic (Tithonian) Tendaguru Formation of Tanzania offers one of the richest sauropod ...
This article is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Geology and Geography a...
Sauropod tooth morphologies and tooth replacement patterns bear important information on feeding hab...
<div><p>ABSTRACT</p><p>Computed tomographic scan data of three premaxillae, a maxilla, and a dentary...
<p>The light gray field indicates taxa that have at least three replacement teeth at each tooth posi...
Ornithopods were key herbivorous dinosaurs in Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems, with a variety of too...
<p>Tooth formation time (days) and replacement rate (1 tooth/X days) in <i>Diplodocus</i> (YPM 4677)...
<p>The Late Jurassic (Tithonian) Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania offered one of the richest sauropod faun...
Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
BACKGROUND: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting inc...
Background: Tooth replacement rate can be calculated in extinct animals by counting incremental line...
© 2019 D’Emic et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Comm...
Tooth replacement rate is an important contributor to feeding ecology for polyphyodont animals. Dino...
<p>The Late Jurassic (Tithonian) Tendaguru Formation of Tanzania offers one of the richest sauropod ...
This article is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of Geology and Geography a...
Sauropod tooth morphologies and tooth replacement patterns bear important information on feeding hab...
<div><p>ABSTRACT</p><p>Computed tomographic scan data of three premaxillae, a maxilla, and a dentary...
<p>The light gray field indicates taxa that have at least three replacement teeth at each tooth posi...
Ornithopods were key herbivorous dinosaurs in Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems, with a variety of too...
<p>Tooth formation time (days) and replacement rate (1 tooth/X days) in <i>Diplodocus</i> (YPM 4677)...
<p>The Late Jurassic (Tithonian) Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania offered one of the richest sauropod faun...