Happy #FossilFriday - this week we revisit "The most complete enantiornithine from North America and a phylogenetic analysis of the Avisauridae"
Read the full article https://t.co/0iQ2iVMfQu
#EvolutionaryStudies #Paleontology https://t.co/Q4Lp5ItoV3
Happy #FossilFriday - this week we revisit "The most complete enantiornithine from North America and a phylogenetic analysis of the Avisauridae"
Read the full article https://t.co/yz5Df62HGd
#EvolutionaryStudies #Paleontology
@jxchong @HarmitMalik It definitely does suck, but I think that, in part, because my art is related to academic science. :}
https://t.co/t8pljQF09o
https://t.co/jTm0ZITP4C
https://t.co/43eZMgcpjN
lots more:
https://t.co/soJVmZN6At
Interesting network re-analysis of recently published multistate character data (in particular Enanthiornithes). https://t.co/QW5eNVB9xl (original study) https://t.co/ORGUwz9DrM (re-analysis)
Rare fossil bird deepens mystery of avian extinctions https://t.co/5XFAhDIicl | @physorg_biology | #ornithology #palaeontology
From this @thePeerJ paper https://t.co/1exDwc4Uoh https://t.co/2sS1RWVppi
Check out this exceptional fossil of an enantiornithine (a 'bird', but with teeth) ever discovered! Mirarce eatoni is from the Late Cretaceous of North America. Enantiornithes also went extinct at the K-Pg boundary, boo. #FossilFriday https://t.co/wRXySkbLbl [Art by Brian Engh] https://t.co/TUvcP675Ee