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Article Reference Dwarf traversodontids (Synapsida, Cynodontia) from the Late Triassic of Lorraine and Luxembourg
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Proceedings Reference Dynamics of suspended particulate matter in coastal waters (the Bay of Seine)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Inproceedings Reference Dynamics of suspended particulate matter in coastal waters (Seine Bay)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Proceedings Reference Dynamique d’expansion d’une population exotique d’Ouettes d’Egypte (Alopochen aegyptiacus).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Proceedings Reference Dynamique de recolonisation du Grand-Duc d’Europe en Région wallonne.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Dynamisches Klima und weichende Küsten im Nahen Osten – Grundlagen der biblischen Sintflut?
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2020
Article Reference Early Carboniferous marine ecosystem recovery after the Hangenberg Crisis, insight from the Tournaisian brachiopod-coral fauna from South Belgium.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Early dispersal for quadrupedal cetaceans: an amphibious whale from the middle Eocene of the southeastern Pacific
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Inproceedings Reference Early Eocene cambaytheres from Indo-Pakistan are the sister group of Perissodactyls
Cambaytherium, Nakusia, and Kalitherium are closely related early Eocene mammals from the Indo-Pakistan region that have been assigned to Perissodactyla (Laurasiatheria)or Anthracobunidae. The latter have been variously considered artiodactyls or perissodactyls, but more recently are usually placed at the base of the order Proboscidea or of the more inclusive Tethytheria (Afrotheria). We present new evidence from the dentition, skull, and postcranial skeleton of Cambaytherium, from Gujarat, India (ca. 54.5 Ma), that cambaytheres occupy a pivotal position as the sister taxon of Perissodactyla. Cambaytherium was more robust than basal perissodactyls such as ″Hyracotherium″ and Homogalax, and had a body mass of ~25-27 kg based on humeral, radial, and dental regressions. Perissodactyl synapomorphies include a transverse nasal-frontal suture, twinned molar metaconids, and an astragalus with deeply grooved trochlea and a saddleshaped navicular facet. Like perissodactyls, cambaytheres are mesaxonic and have hooflike unguals and a cursorially-adapted skeleton. Plesiomorphic traits compared to basal perissodactyls include bunodont molars with large conules and almost no hint of bilophodonty, unmolarized premolars, sacrum with four vertebrae, humerus with distally extensive pectoral crest and distal articulation lacking a capitular tail, distal radius without discrete scaphoid and lunate fossae, femur with low greater trochanter, calcaneus robust and wide with rounded ectal facet, astragalus wide with moderately long neck and vestigial astragalar foramen, navicular and cuboid short and wide, metapodials short and robust, and Mc I and Mt V present. In most or all of these traits cambaytheres are intermediate between phenacodontid condylarths and perissodactyls but closer to the latter. Our phylogenetic analyses place cambaytheres just outside perissodactyls, and place anthracobunids among primitive perissodactyls. However, similarities between cambaytheres and anthracobunids suggest that they are closely related, and future discovery of skeletal material of anthracobunids will provide a test of this hypothesis. Our results indicate that Anthracobunidae are not Proboscidea or tethytheres, and suggest that the origin of Perissodactyla may have taken place on the drifting Indian plate. How the progenitors of perissodactyls reached India is more problematic but might have involved land connections with Afro-Arabia during the Paleocene. Field work and research supported by the National Geographic Society.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Inproceedings Reference Early Eocene climate changes in the North Sea Basin: a Belgian perspective
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016