All Stories

  1. Evolution and diversity of biomineralized columnar architecture in early Cambrian phosphatic-shelled brachiopods
  2. Evolution and diversity of biomineralized columnar architecture in early Cambrian phosphatic-shelled brachiopods
  3. Evolution and diversity of biomineralized columnar architecture in early Cambrian phosphatic-shelled brachiopods
  4. Diversity and evolutionary growth of biomineralized columns in early Cambrian phosphatic-shelled brachiopods
  5. The siphonotretide brachiopod Schizambon from the Early Ordovician of South China: ontogeny and affinity
  6. First Report of Small Skeletal Fossils from the Upper Guojiaba Formation (Series 2, Cambrian), Southern Shaanxi, South China
  7. Evolution and diversity of biomineralized columnar architecture in early Cambrian phosphatic-shelled brachiopods
  8. Evolution of brachiopod symbiosis in the early Paleozoic
  9. Cambrian (Stage 4 to Wuliuan) brachiopods from Sonora, Mexico
  10. Fossil brachiopod identification using a new deep convolutional neural network
  11. First Report of Small Shelly Fossils from the Cambrian Miaolingian Limestones (Zhangxia and Hsuzhuang Formations) in Yiyang County, Henan Province of North China
  12. Biomacromolecules in recent phosphate-shelled brachiopods: identification and characterization of chitin matrix
  13. Brachiopods from the Latham Shale Lagerstätte (Cambrian Series 2, Stage 4) and Cadiz Formation (Miaolingian, Wuliuan), California
  14. Using laser micropyrolysis to assess potential relationships between Cambrian tommotiids and organophosphatic brachiopods
  15. Go large or go conical: allometric trajectory of an early Cambrian acrotretide brachiopod
  16. Burrows filled with faecal pellets from the Cambrian (Stage 4) Guanshan biota of South China and their palaeoecological implications
  17. Early Cambrian (Stage 4) brachiopods from the Shipai Formation in the Three Gorges area of South China
  18. Silurian (Aeronian) rhynchonelliform brachiopods of Shabdjereh, south-west Central Iran and their significance for early spiriferide evolution
  19. Possible drill holes and pseudoborings in obolid shells from the Cambrian/Ordovician boundary beds of Estonia and the uppermost Cambrian of NW Russia
  20. Camenellan tommotiids from the Cambrian Series 2 of East Antarctica: biostratigraphy, palaeobiogeography, and systematics
  21. The oldest Cambrian trilobite – brachiopod association in South China
  22. Shell structure, ornamentation and affinity of the problematic early Cambrian brachiopodHeliomedusa orienta
  23. First report of acrotretoid brachiopod shell beds in the lower Cambrian (Stage 4) Guanshan Biota of eastern Yunnan, South China
  24. Early Cambrian organophosphatic brachiopods from the Xinji Formation, at Shuiyu section, Shanxi Province, North China
  25. First report of brachiopods with soft parts from the Lower Cambrian Latham Shale (Series 2, Stage 4), California
  26. Ontogeny and evolutionary significance of a new acrotretide brachiopod genus from Cambrian Series 2 of South China
  27. Linguliform brachiopods from the Cambrian (Guzhangian) Karpinsk Formation of Novaya Zemlya
  28. The oldest ‘Lingulellotreta’ (Lingulata, Brachiopoda) from China and its phylogenetic significance: integrating new material from the Cambrian Stage 3–4 Lagerstätten in eastern Yunnan, South China
  29. Brachiopods from the Byrd Group (Cambrian Series 2, Stage 4) Central Transantarctic Mountains, East Antarctica: biostratigraphy, phylogeny and systematics
  30. Characterization of organophosphatic brachiopod shells: spectroscopic assessment of collagen matrix and biomineral components
  31. The Early Devonian (Emsian) acrotretid microbrachiopod Opsiconidion minor Popov, 1981, from the Alaska/Yukon Territory border and Novaya Zemlya
  32. Glendonite occurrences in the Tremadocian of Baltica: first Early Palaeozoic evidence of massive ikaite precipitation at temperate latitudes
  33. Cambrian rhynchonelliform nisusioid brachiopods: phylogeny and distribution
  34. Mollusks from the upper Shackleton Limestone (Cambrian Series 2), Central Transantarctic Mountains, East Antarctica
  35. The problematic lingulate brachiopod Aulonotreta from the Ordovician (Dapingian–Darriwilian) of Baltoscandia
  36. Glendonite occurrences in the Tremadocian of Baltica: first Early Palaeozoic evidence of massive ikaite precipitation at temperate latitude
  37. Earliest ontogeny of early Cambrian acrotretoid brachiopods — first evidence for metamorphosis and its implications
  38. Radiation of the Earliest Calcareous Brachiopods
  39. Early Paleozoic Radiation And Classification of Organo-Phosphatic Brachiopods
  40. Evolutionary significance of a middle Cambrian (Series 3) in situ occurrence of the pedunculate rhynchonelliform brachiopod Nisusia sulcata
  41. Post-metamorphic allometry in the earliest acrotretoid brachiopods from the lower Cambrian (Series 2) of South China, and its implications
  42. The attachment strategies of Cambrian kutorginate brachiopods: the curious case of two pedicle openings and their phylogenetic significance
  43. Gene Expression Patterns in Brachiopod Larvae Refute the “Brachiopod-Fold” Hypothesis
  44. Pentameroid brachiopod Karlsorus new genus from the upper Wenlock (Silurian) Slite Beds, Gotland, Sweden
  45. Brachiopods: origin and early history
  46. Unusual pitted Ordovician brachiopods from the East Baltic: the significance of coarsely pitted ornamentations in linguliforms
  47. Ecology, biofacies, biogeography and systematics of micromorphic lingulate brachiopods from the Ordovician (Darriwilian-Sandbian) of south-central China
  48. Do brachiopods show substrate-related phenotypic variation? A case study from the Burgess Shale
  49. The Cambrian brachiopod fauna from the first-trilobite age Shuijingtuo Formation in the Three Gorges area of China
  50. Reassessment of the early Triassic lingulid brachiopod ‘Lingula’ borealis Bittner, 1899 and related problems of lingulid taxonomy
  51. EXCEPTIONALLY PRESERVED MICKWITZIA FROM THE INDIAN SPRINGS LAGERSTÄTTE (CAMBRIAN STAGE 3), NEVADA AND IMPLICATIONS FOR EARLY CAMBRIAN BRACHIOPOD EVOLUTION
  52. Survival on a soft seafloor: life strategies of brachiopods from the Cambrian Burgess Shale
  53. Exceptionally preserved Mickwitzia from the Indian Springs Lagerstätte (Cambrian Stage 3), Nevada
  54. The early Cambrian tommotiid Kulparina rostrata from South Australia
  55. First report of linguloid brachiopods with soft parts from the lower Cambrian (Series 2, Stage 4) of the Three Gorges area, South China
  56. Himalayan Cambrian brachiopods
  57. Competition and mimicry: the curious case of chaetae in brachiopods from the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale
  58. Review of the Ordovician stratigraphy and fauna of the Anarak Region in Central Iran
  59. Taxonomy, morphology, shell structure and early ontogeny ofPelmanotretanom. nov. from the lower Cambrian of Siberia
  60. Brachiopods hitching a ride: an early case of commensalism in the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale
  61. Erratum: ERRATUM: An early Cambrian agglutinated tubular lophophorate with brachiopod characters
  62. An early Cambrian agglutinated tubular lophophorate with brachiopod characters
  63. Oldest glosselline linguliform brachiopod with soft parts from the Lower Cambrian of Yunnan, Southern China
  64. Ordovician–Silurian Chileida—First Post-Cambrian Records of an Enigmatic Group of Brachiopoda
  65. Adaptive strategies and environmental significance of lingulid brachiopods across the late Permian extinction
  66. New U–Pb zircon ages of the Sandbian (Upper Ordovician) “Big K-bentonite” in Baltoscandia (Estonia and Sweden) by LA-ICPMS
  67. Oldest mickwitziid brachiopod from the Terreneuvian of southern France
  68. The new stem-group brachiopod Oymurania from the lower Cambrian of Siberia
  69. Paterimitra pyramidalisfrom South Australia: scleritome, shell structure and evolution of a lower Cambrian stem group brachiopod
  70. Silurian craniide brachiopods from Gotland
  71. Cambrian (Furongian) rhynchonelliform brachiopods from the Eastern Alborz Mountains, Iran
  72. Metamorphosis in Craniiformea revisited: Novocrania anomala shows delayed development of the ventral valve
  73. Morphology, ontogeny and affinities of the Hirnantian triplisiid brachiopodStreptis undiferafrom Baltoscandia
  74. A sclerite-bearing stem group entoproct from the early Cambrian and its implications
  75. Chapter 10 Biogeography of Ordovician linguliform and craniiform brachiopods
  76. Earliest ontogeny of Early Palaeozoic Craniiformea: compelling evidence for lecithotrophy
  77. Peduncular attached secondary tiering acrotretoid brachiopods from the Chengjiang fauna: Implications for the ecological expansion of brachiopods during the Cambrian explosion
  78. The problematic early Cambrian fossil Tumulduria incomperta represents the detached ventral interarea of a paterinid brachiopod
  79. Lower palaeozoic stratigraphy of murchisonfjorden and sparreneset, nordaustlandet, svalbard
  80. Taxonomy and biostratigraphy of Ordovician brachiopods from northeastern Ny Friesland, Spitsbergen
  81. Relic aragonite from Ordovician-Silurian brachiopods: Implications for the evolution of calcification
  82. An obolellate brachiopod with soft-part preservation from the Early Cambrian Chengjiang fauna of China
  83. The exceptionally preserved Early Cambrian stem rhynchonelliform brachiopod Longtancunella and its implications
  84. Scleritome construction, biofacies, biostratigraphy and systematics of the tommotiid Eccentrotheca helenia sp. nov. from the Early Cambrian of South Australia
  85. First record of repaired durophagous shell damages in Early Cambrian lingulate brachiopods with preserved pedicles
  86. First record of a bivalved larval shell in Early Cambrian tommotiids and its phylogenetic significance
  87. The oldest brachiopods from the lower Cambrian of South Australia
  88. Diversity fluctuations and biogeography of Ordovician brachiopod faunas in northeastern Spitsbergen
  89. Soft-Part Preservation in a Linguliform Brachiopod from the Lower Cambrian Wulongqing Formation (Guanshan Fauna) of Yunnan, South China
  90. Setatella significans, a new name for mickwitziid stem group brachiopods from the lower Cambrian of Greenland and Labrador
  91. First record of the brachiopodLingulella waptaensiswith pedicle from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale
  92. Homologous skeletal secretion in tommotiids and brachiopods
  93. Earliest ontogeny of Early Palaeozoic Craniiformea: implications for brachiopod phylogeny
  94. Architecture and function of the lophophore in the problematic brachiopod Heliomedusa orienta (Early Cambrian, South China)
  95. First report of the early Cambrian stem group brachiopod Mickwitzia from East Gondwana
  96. Early ontogeny and soft tissue preservation in siphonotretide brachiopods: New data from the Cambrian–Ordovician of Iran
  97. The first occurrence of a lingulid brachiopod from the Cretaceous of Sergipe, Brazil, with a restudy of ‘Lingula’ bagualensis Wilckens, 1905 from southern Patagonia
  98. The scleritome of Paterimitra: an Early Cambrian stem group brachiopod from South Australia
  99. THE ENIGMATIC EARLY CAMBRIANSALANYGOLINA- A STEM GROUP OF RHYNCHONELLIFORM CHILEATE BRACHIOPODS?
  100. Gondwanan faunal signatures from Early Palaeozoic terranes of Kazakhstan and Central Asia: evidence and tectonic implications
  101. The Early Cambrian tommotiid Micrina, a sessile bivalved stem group brachiopod
  102. Middle Cambrian to Lower Ordovician faunas from the Chingiz Mountain Range, central Kazakhstan
  103. The scleritome of Eccentrotheca from the Lower Cambrian of South Australia: Lophophorate affinities and implications for tommotiid phylogeny
  104. Columnar shell structures in early linguloid brachiopods – new data from the Middle Cambrian of Sweden
  105. Earliest ontogeny of Middle Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods (Clitambonitoidea and Polytoechioidea): implications for brachiopod phylogeny
  106. The Lower Cambrian brachiopodKyrshabaktellaand associated shelly fossils from the Harkless Formation, southern Nevada
  107. Early–Middle Ordovician (Billingen–Volkhov stages) Orthide and Protorthide brachiopods from the East Baltic
  108. A spinose stem group brachiopod with pedicle from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale
  109. Proposed stratotype for the base of the highest Cambrian stage at the first appearance datum of Cordylodus andresi, Lawson Cove section, Utah, USA
  110. ENDOSYMBIOSIS IN ORDOVICIAN–SILURIAN CORALS AND STROMATOPOROIDS: A NEW LINGULID AND ITS TRACE FROM EASTERN CANADA
  111. New and poorly known acrotretid brachiopods (Class Lingulata) from the Cedaria-Crepicephalus zone (late Middle Cambrian) of the Great Basin, USA
  112. LOWER ORDOVICIAN (TREMADOCIAN) LINGULATE BRACHIOPODS FROM THE HOUSE AND FILLMORE FORMATIONS, IBEX AREA, WESTERN UTAH, USA
  113. Neodymium isotopic composition of Cambrian–Ordovician biogenic apatite in the Baltoscandian Basin: implications for palaeogeographical evolution and patterns of biodiversity
  114. EARLY CAMBRIAN BRACHIOPODS FROM NORTH-EAST GREENLAND
  115. Discovery of a new type of shell structure within the organophosphatic brachiopods and the status of the family Curticiidae
  116. The oldest-known metazoan parasite?
  117. THE OLDEST-KNOWN METAZOAN PARASITE?
  118. Conodont biostratigraphy and faunal assemblages in radiolarian ribbon-banded cherts of the Burubaital Formation, West Balkhash Region, Kazakhstan
  119. Chemico-structure of the organophosphatic shells of siphonotretide brachiopods
  120. Early Cambrian lingulate brachiopods from the Shaanxi Province, China
  121. 22. Tube-Shaped Incertae Sedis
  122. Understanding linguloid brachiopods: Obolus and Ungula as examples
  123. The brachiopod fold: a neglected body plan hypothesis
  124. Faunal composition and dynamics in unconsolidated sediments: a case study from the Middle Ordovician of the East Baltic
  125. A Stem Group Brachiopod From The Lower Cambrian: Support For A Micrina (Halkieriid) Ancestry
  126. Shell Structure And Inferred Growth, Functions And Affinities Of The Sclerites Of The Problematic Micrina
  127. Lingulate brachiopods from the Cambrian-Ordovician boundary beds of Utah
  128. LINGULATE BRACHIOPODS FROM THE CAMBRIAN-ORDOVICIAN BOUNDARY BEDS OF UTAH
  129. Brachiopods: Cambrian-Tremadoc precursors to Ordovician radiation events
  130. Functional morphology of articulatory structures and implications for patterns of musculature in Cambrian rhynchonelliform brachiopods
  131. Phylogeny and Classification: Linguliformea and Craniiformea
  132. Spatial variations in faunal composition, Middle Ordovician, Volkhov Stage, East Baltic
  133. The Hunneberg Stage (Ordovician) in the area east of St. Petersburg, north-western Russia
  134. Early Ordovician organophosphatic brachiopods with Baltoscandian affinities from the Alay Range, southern Kyrgyzstan
  135. Redescription of the Ordovician acrotretoid brachiopodConotretaWalcott, 1889
  136. Cambrian phosphatic brachiopods from the Precordillera of western Argentina
  137. Organophosphatic brachiopods:Patterns of biodiversification and extinction in the Early Palaeozoic
  138. Nd isotope composition and rare earth element distribution in early Paleozoic biogenic apatite from Baltoscandia: A signature of Iapetus ocean water
  139. Late Ordovician and early Silurian Trimerellide brachiopods from Kazakhstan
  140. Early Cambrian Lingulellotreta (Lingulata, Brachiopoda) from South Kazakhstan (Malyi Karatau Range) and South China (Eastern Yunnan)
  141. Middle Ordovician (Llanvirn) ungulate brachiopods and conodonts from the Malyi Karatau Range, Kazakhstan
  142. Late Ordovician brachiopod assemblage of Hiberno‐Salairian type from Central Kazakhstan
  143. The elkaniide brachiopodVolborthia from the lower ordovician of Baltoscandia
  144. Ceratretide brachiopods from the lower and middle Cambrian of Sweden, Kazakhstan, and Siberia
  145. Cambrian-Ordovician lingulate brachiopods from Scandinavia, Kazakhstan, and South Ural Mountains
  146. Revision of the type species of Acrotreta and related lingulate brachiopods
  147. Review of the Cambrian acrotretid brachiopodNeotreta
  148. Phylogenetic analysis and classification of the Brachiopoda - reply and comments
  149. Lingulate brachiopods from the Cambrian—Ordovician boundary beds in Sweden
  150. Phylogenetic analysis of higher taxa of Brachiopoda
  151. The Lower Ordovician brachiopod genus Lamanskya and the Family Elkaniidae
  152. Middle ordovician phosphatic inarticulate brachiopods from västergöt-land and dalarna, Sweden by Lars E. Holmer, Fossils and Strata, No. 26, Universitetsforlaget, Oslo, 1989. No. of pages: 172. Price: NOK 339 (softback)
  153. Phyletic relationships within the Brachiopoda
  154. The acrotretacean brachiopod Ceratreta tanneri (Metzger) from the Upper Cambrian of Baltoscandia
  155. Discinacean brachiopods from the Ordovician Kullsberg and Boda limestones of Dalarna, Sweden
  156. Ordovician mazuelloids and other microfossils from Västergötland
  157. Inarticulate brachiopods around the Middle-Upper Ordovician boundary in Västergötland
  158. Lower Viruan discontinuity surfaces in central Sweden