Gastropods are generally rare in amber. In this paper we describe an example of exceptional soft-bodied preservation in a fossil terrestrial mollusk-a snail shell with some tissue, including part of the cephalic region (head) with a tentacle and inferred eye stalk, and potentially part of the foot and operculum. The snail, a probable juvenile, is preserved in Burmese amber (Burmite) from Myanmar, of earliest Cenomanian age. Morphological evidence suggests a cyclophoroidean ancestry and a possible attribution to the family Cyclophoridae; members of this superfamily are widespread today in Asia, thus indicating a long geological history in the region. This specimen constitutes the first confirmed and oldest record of soft-bodied preservation ...
It has been postulated that, because of its terrestrial origin, amber could not have preserved marin...
Coleoid cephalopods are characterized by internalization of their shell, and are divided into the te...
Suborder Cyphophthalmi Simon, 1879 Remarks. All specimens described here can be unequivocally iden...
Gastropods are generally rare in amber. In this paper we describe an example of exceptional soft-bod...
Amber is fossilized tree resin, and inclusions usually comprise terrestrial and, rarely, aquatic org...
Inclusions of terrestrial mollusks in Kachin amber are of increasing interest to palaeontologists in...
<p>The earliest Miocene (Aquitanian, 23–21 Ma) Hang Mon Formation at Hang Mon in Northern Vietnam ha...
Clavate (club-shaped) structures rimming mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber from Myanmar, previously misdi...
The mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber (~99 Ma, Myanmar), widely known for exquisite preservation of thero...
International audienceTeredinidae are obligate xylophagous bivalves colonizing drifted woods, which ...
© 2020 PeerJ Inc.. All rights reserved. Burmese Cretaceous amber (~99 Ma, Myanmar) is famous for the...
Gastropod shells are common in the fossil record, but their fossil soft tissues are almost unknown, ...
International audienceLate Albian amber from Charente-Maritime (southwestern France) contains the fi...
Burmese amber and amber from other periods and regions became a rich source of new extinct insect sp...
The Viviparidae, commonly known as River Snails, is a dominant group of freshwater snails with a nea...
It has been postulated that, because of its terrestrial origin, amber could not have preserved marin...
Coleoid cephalopods are characterized by internalization of their shell, and are divided into the te...
Suborder Cyphophthalmi Simon, 1879 Remarks. All specimens described here can be unequivocally iden...
Gastropods are generally rare in amber. In this paper we describe an example of exceptional soft-bod...
Amber is fossilized tree resin, and inclusions usually comprise terrestrial and, rarely, aquatic org...
Inclusions of terrestrial mollusks in Kachin amber are of increasing interest to palaeontologists in...
<p>The earliest Miocene (Aquitanian, 23–21 Ma) Hang Mon Formation at Hang Mon in Northern Vietnam ha...
Clavate (club-shaped) structures rimming mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber from Myanmar, previously misdi...
The mid-Cretaceous Burmese amber (~99 Ma, Myanmar), widely known for exquisite preservation of thero...
International audienceTeredinidae are obligate xylophagous bivalves colonizing drifted woods, which ...
© 2020 PeerJ Inc.. All rights reserved. Burmese Cretaceous amber (~99 Ma, Myanmar) is famous for the...
Gastropod shells are common in the fossil record, but their fossil soft tissues are almost unknown, ...
International audienceLate Albian amber from Charente-Maritime (southwestern France) contains the fi...
Burmese amber and amber from other periods and regions became a rich source of new extinct insect sp...
The Viviparidae, commonly known as River Snails, is a dominant group of freshwater snails with a nea...
It has been postulated that, because of its terrestrial origin, amber could not have preserved marin...
Coleoid cephalopods are characterized by internalization of their shell, and are divided into the te...
Suborder Cyphophthalmi Simon, 1879 Remarks. All specimens described here can be unequivocally iden...