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Search publications of the members of the Royal Belgian institute of natural Sciences

Article Reference Gladiopycnodontidae, a new family of pycnodontiform fishes from the Late Cretaceous of Lebanon, with the description of three genera.
Inproceedings Reference An archaic ichthyosaur from Iraq reveals disparate phylogenetic origins for Cretaceous ichthyosaurs
Article Reference Cold Code: The global initiative to DNA barcode amphibians and nonavian reptiles
Article Reference Comparative phylogeography reveals distinct colonization patterns of Cretan snakes
Article Reference Mouthful of snake: An African snake-eater’s (Polemon fulvicollis graueri) large typhlopid prey
Article Reference Next-generation museomics disentangles one of the largest primate radiations
Inproceedings Reference Ammonite extinction revisited
Inproceedings Reference The CRETACAM project: a new look at Santonian to Maastrichtian deposits of the Belgian Campine basin
The Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences(RBINS) holds a collections of well over 7000 Cretaceous fossils that were collected by the RBINS staff in the early 1930ies during the construction of several coal mine shafts in the eastern part of the Belgian Campine Basin. These fossils include ammonites, nautilids, belemnites, bivalves (inoceramids and other), gastropods, crustaceans, brachiopods, echinoderms and other. The majority of the material is from mine shafts 1 and 2 of the Houthalen and Zolder mines, in-between 400 and 600 m below surface. Both mines are located in the eastern part of the Campine Basin. Since their discovery, the majority of this material has never been thoroughly studied and published. Detailed listings of the fauna and an overview in relation to the stratigraphy are absent. In the 1930ies, by the varying amounts of glauconite, chalk, sand, sandstone and the ‘Gyrolithes’ ichnofossils, the sediments between 400 and 600 m depth were interpreted as belonging to the ‘Smectite de Herve’ facies. Therefore, early students referred to fossils from this locality as Campanian in age, while more recent studies and ongoing work document Santonian to Maastrichtian ages with (from bottom to top) the Asdonk and Sonnisheide Members (Vaals Formation), the Zeven Wegen, Beutenaken Marl, Beutenaken Chalk, Vijlen and Lixhe Members (Gulpen Formation). The CRETACAM project aims for fully documenting the lithological, stratigraphical, paleontological and paleo- ecological changes in the Santonian to Maastrichtian sequence of the eastern part of the Campine Basin. In a first step, all locality information of all 7000 specimens was digitalized. In a second and ongoing step, the taxonomy of all specimens will be revised by an international team of paleontologists.
Article Reference 3D reconstruction of fang replacement in the venomous snakes Dendroaspis jamesoni (Elapidae) and Bitis arietans (Viperidae)
Article Reference Reliable DNA barcoding performance proved for species and island populations of Comoran squamate reptiles
Article Reference Nieuwe familie fossiele beenvissen ontdekt in Libanon
Article Reference Notes on the herpetofauna of western Bas-Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Article Reference Genetic and morphological divergences in the cosmopolitan deep-sea amphipod Eurythenes gryllus reveal a diverse abyss and a bipolar species
Article Reference Morphological variation and taxonomic reassessment of the endemic Malagasy blind snake family Xenotyphlopidae
Article Reference Editorial
Article Reference Using DNA barcodes for assessing diversity in the family Hybotidae (Diptera, Empidoidea)
Article Reference Adhoc: an R package to calculate ad hoc distance thresholds for DNA barcoding identification
Article Reference New data on the morphology and distribution of the enigmatic Schouteden’s sun snake, Helophis schoutedeni (de Witte, 1922) from the Congo Basin
Article Reference New insights into the systematics and molecular phylogeny of the Malagasy snake genus Liopholidophis suggest at least one rapid reversal of extreme sexual dimorphism in tail length
Inproceedings Reference Ammonites on the brink of extinction: diversity, abundance, and geographic range of the Order Ammonoidea at the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K/Pg) Boundary
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