International audienceBackground: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal information regarding their phylogenetic position, as well as paleobiology, diet, development, and growth. Extant birds are edentulous (toothless), but their closest relatives among stem birds, the Cretaceous Hesperornithiformes and Ichthyornithiformes, retained teeth. Despite their significant phylogenetic position immediately outside the avian crown group, the dentitions of these taxa have never been studied in detail. To obtain new insight into the biology of these 'last' toothed birds, we use cutting-edge visualisation techniques to describe their dentitions at unprecedented levels of detail, in particular propagation phase contrast x-ray synchrotr...
Synchrotron x-ray micromographic virtual sections of comparative teeth, non-avian and presumably avi...
International audienceModern birds (crown group birds, called Neornithes) are toothless; however, th...
Jeholornis is a representative of the earliest-diverging bird lineages, providing important evidence...
International audienceBackground: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal informatio...
International audienceBackground: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal informatio...
BACKGROUND: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal information regarding their phyl...
All living birds are toothless, constituting by far the most diverse toothless vertebrate clade, and...
Polyphyodonty—multiple tooth generations—in Mesozoic birds has been confirmed since the nineteenth c...
All extant birds are toothless, and recent molecular evidence suggests that edentulism in extant bir...
Edentulism, the absence of teeth, has evolved convergently among vertebrates, including birds, turtl...
Several potential drivers of avian tooth loss have been proposed, although consensus remains elusive...
The Late Jurassic Archaeopterygidae, comprising the iconic genus Archaeopteryx, is altogether among ...
Synchrotron and conventional x-ray microtomographic virtual sections in teeth of Ichthyornithiformes...
International audienceThe Late Jurassic Archaeopterygidae, comprising the iconic genus Archaeopteryx...
Synchrotron x-ray micromographic virtual sections of comparative teeth, non-avian and presumably avi...
International audienceModern birds (crown group birds, called Neornithes) are toothless; however, th...
Jeholornis is a representative of the earliest-diverging bird lineages, providing important evidence...
International audienceBackground: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal informatio...
International audienceBackground: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal informatio...
BACKGROUND: The dentitions of extinct organisms can provide pivotal information regarding their phyl...
All living birds are toothless, constituting by far the most diverse toothless vertebrate clade, and...
Polyphyodonty—multiple tooth generations—in Mesozoic birds has been confirmed since the nineteenth c...
All extant birds are toothless, and recent molecular evidence suggests that edentulism in extant bir...
Edentulism, the absence of teeth, has evolved convergently among vertebrates, including birds, turtl...
Several potential drivers of avian tooth loss have been proposed, although consensus remains elusive...
The Late Jurassic Archaeopterygidae, comprising the iconic genus Archaeopteryx, is altogether among ...
Synchrotron and conventional x-ray microtomographic virtual sections in teeth of Ichthyornithiformes...
International audienceThe Late Jurassic Archaeopterygidae, comprising the iconic genus Archaeopteryx...
Synchrotron x-ray micromographic virtual sections of comparative teeth, non-avian and presumably avi...
International audienceModern birds (crown group birds, called Neornithes) are toothless; however, th...
Jeholornis is a representative of the earliest-diverging bird lineages, providing important evidence...