Being obligate cementers, oysters (Ostreoidea), both fossil and Recent, often yield valuable information on their substrates, whether biotic/ abiotic, perishable or inert. By a process called bioimmuration, oyster shells may preserve lightly or non-calcified sessile organisms already present on the same substrates, and occasionally replicate external features of such substrates on their unattached right valves (xenomorphism). From Upper Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian) strata in northwest Europe, there are numerous records of oysters attached to calcitic and aragonitic substrates, such as echinoids, bivalves (including other oysters, either conspecific or not), ammonoid and coleoid cephalopods, sponges and scleractinian corals. These ex...
three tests the initial spiral surrounds a surface pore of a clionid sponge boring. The discovery of...
Oysters, whose inner shell layer contains chambers, vesicles, and sometimes chalky deposits, often h...
Shell concentrations are useful indicators of relative sea-level changes, systems tracts, and deposi...
WIPPICH Certain groups of gryphaeid oysters became secondarily adapted to soft-bottom conditions by ...
The present study investigated traces of bioerosion in parautochthonous associations of oysters from...
Lower Cretaceous (lower Hauterivian) oyster mass occurrences (OMOs) dominated by the gryphaeid small...
Saddle oysters (Anomiidae) attach themselves to calcareous hard substrates by means of a calcified b...
Byssate bivalves can be attached to hard substrates by byssal threads. Dissolution of the substrate...
Pycnodonte or “honeycomb-oysters” (Bivalvia: Gryphaeidea) is an extinct genus of calcite-producing b...
Exposed mollusc shells may act as benthic islands in soft bottoms, and the analysis of their encrust...
Shell beds are products of complex biological, taphonomic, and sedimentological factors. Paleoecolog...
Oysters are unusual among bivalves in that they possess chambers, often filled with soft, chalky cal...
The Toolebuc Formation (Late Albian) is a thin (<40m), very widely distributed unit marking the maxi...
Oysters live permanently immobilised by cementation of the left valve to a hard substrate. The conta...
Original shell coloration, preserved as radial bands in a gryphaeid oyster species from the Upper Cr...
three tests the initial spiral surrounds a surface pore of a clionid sponge boring. The discovery of...
Oysters, whose inner shell layer contains chambers, vesicles, and sometimes chalky deposits, often h...
Shell concentrations are useful indicators of relative sea-level changes, systems tracts, and deposi...
WIPPICH Certain groups of gryphaeid oysters became secondarily adapted to soft-bottom conditions by ...
The present study investigated traces of bioerosion in parautochthonous associations of oysters from...
Lower Cretaceous (lower Hauterivian) oyster mass occurrences (OMOs) dominated by the gryphaeid small...
Saddle oysters (Anomiidae) attach themselves to calcareous hard substrates by means of a calcified b...
Byssate bivalves can be attached to hard substrates by byssal threads. Dissolution of the substrate...
Pycnodonte or “honeycomb-oysters” (Bivalvia: Gryphaeidea) is an extinct genus of calcite-producing b...
Exposed mollusc shells may act as benthic islands in soft bottoms, and the analysis of their encrust...
Shell beds are products of complex biological, taphonomic, and sedimentological factors. Paleoecolog...
Oysters are unusual among bivalves in that they possess chambers, often filled with soft, chalky cal...
The Toolebuc Formation (Late Albian) is a thin (<40m), very widely distributed unit marking the maxi...
Oysters live permanently immobilised by cementation of the left valve to a hard substrate. The conta...
Original shell coloration, preserved as radial bands in a gryphaeid oyster species from the Upper Cr...
three tests the initial spiral surrounds a surface pore of a clionid sponge boring. The discovery of...
Oysters, whose inner shell layer contains chambers, vesicles, and sometimes chalky deposits, often h...
Shell concentrations are useful indicators of relative sea-level changes, systems tracts, and deposi...