In most modern bony vertebrates, a considerable portion of the chondrocranium remains cartilaginous only during a relatively small window of embryonic development, making it difficult to study this complex structure. Yet, the transient nature of some chondrocranial elements is precisely why it is so intriguing. Since the chondrocranium has never been lost in any vertebrate, its function is critical to craniofacial development, disease, and evolution. Experimental evidence for the various roles of the chondrocranium is limited, and though snapshots of chondrocranial development in various species at isolated time points are valuable and informative, these cannot provide the data needed to determine the functions of the chondrocranium, or its...
AbstractThe lateral wall of the avian braincase, which is indicative of the primitive amniote condit...
In histology textbooks, the vertebrate skeleton is represented as almost entirely made of bone and c...
AbstractThe cranial base exerts a supportive role for the brain and includes the occipital, sphenoid...
AbstractThe vertebrate cranial base is a complex structure composed of bone, cartilage and other con...
Bones are essential vertebrate structures that arise during embryonic development from mesenchymal c...
Phenotypic integration patterns in the mammalian skull have long been a focus of intense interest as...
The chondrocranium is the cartilage component of the vertebrate braincase. Among jawed vertebrates i...
The multiple skeletal components of the skull originate asynchronously and their developmental sched...
Although endochondral ossification of the limb and axial skeleton is relatively well-understood, the...
Chrondrocranium, the cartilaginous skull, is one of the major innovations that underlie evolution of...
Abstract The human skull is a complex and highly integrated structure that has long held the fascina...
Central to the story of vertebrate evolution is the origin of the vertebrate head, a problem difficu...
Eight stages in the development of skull elements, commencing from the first day to twentyfive days ...
The flat bones of the prechordal skull are deposited by crest cells originating from the primordial ...
The vertebrate head and face, one of the defining features of vertebrates, is an evolutionary novelt...
AbstractThe lateral wall of the avian braincase, which is indicative of the primitive amniote condit...
In histology textbooks, the vertebrate skeleton is represented as almost entirely made of bone and c...
AbstractThe cranial base exerts a supportive role for the brain and includes the occipital, sphenoid...
AbstractThe vertebrate cranial base is a complex structure composed of bone, cartilage and other con...
Bones are essential vertebrate structures that arise during embryonic development from mesenchymal c...
Phenotypic integration patterns in the mammalian skull have long been a focus of intense interest as...
The chondrocranium is the cartilage component of the vertebrate braincase. Among jawed vertebrates i...
The multiple skeletal components of the skull originate asynchronously and their developmental sched...
Although endochondral ossification of the limb and axial skeleton is relatively well-understood, the...
Chrondrocranium, the cartilaginous skull, is one of the major innovations that underlie evolution of...
Abstract The human skull is a complex and highly integrated structure that has long held the fascina...
Central to the story of vertebrate evolution is the origin of the vertebrate head, a problem difficu...
Eight stages in the development of skull elements, commencing from the first day to twentyfive days ...
The flat bones of the prechordal skull are deposited by crest cells originating from the primordial ...
The vertebrate head and face, one of the defining features of vertebrates, is an evolutionary novelt...
AbstractThe lateral wall of the avian braincase, which is indicative of the primitive amniote condit...
In histology textbooks, the vertebrate skeleton is represented as almost entirely made of bone and c...
AbstractThe cranial base exerts a supportive role for the brain and includes the occipital, sphenoid...