Describing new specimens of 75 million-year-old fossil lizards from New Mexico, #DinosaurInstitute graduate student Hank Woolley (@paleo_hank) helps us better understand latitudinal patterns of diversity during the Late Cretaceous in his first publication: https://t.co/7fzg5Rptkw https://t.co/vj41uYwdEF
New fossil lizard specimens from a poorly-known squamate assemblage in the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian) San Juan Basin, New Mexico, USA https://t.co/EXJLxl47da @thePeerJ https://t.co/kddJyexdr9
Exciting news! Our description of new #fossil #lizard material from the Late Cretaceous of #NewMexico was published today in @thePeerJ! Check out the #openaccess article at: https://t.co/lhrl4MUVzB @DinosaurJoe #Squamates #Paleontology #Biodiversity #Biogeography https://t.co/KktIjUqR3O