enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thecodontia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thecodontia

    Thecodontia (meaning 'socket-teeth'), now considered an obsolete taxonomic grouping, was formerly used to describe a diverse "order" of early archosaurian reptiles that first appeared in the latest Permian period and flourished until the end of the Triassic period. All of them were built somewhat like crocodiles but with shorter skulls, more ...

  3. Mary King (merchant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_King_(merchant)

    In later life, Mary and her children lived in what was then known as King's or Alexander King's Close. The name originally came from her grandfather (her mother Jonet's father), but the property came to be more associated with her uncle Alexander King junior, who lived there and was a significant and well-known legal and political figure in early British political history. [12]

  4. Mary de Monthermer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_de_Monthermer

    Mary MacDuff, Countess of Fife (née de Monthermer; October 1297 – c. 1371) was an English noblewoman. She was a daughter of Ralph de Monthermer, 1st Baron Monthermer and his wife Princess Joan , thereby making her the grandchild of King Edward I of England .

  5. Thecodontosaurus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thecodontosaurus

    This did not change when Richard Owen coined the term Dinosauria in 1842, because Owen did not recognise Thecodontosaurus as a dinosaur; in 1865, he assigned it to the Thecodontia. It was not until 1870 that Thomas Huxley became the first person to understand that it was a dinosaur, though referring it incorrectly to the Scelidosauridae. [19]

  6. Thecodont dentition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thecodont_dentition

    Thecodont dentition is a morphological arrangement in which the base of the tooth is completely enclosed in a deep socket of bone, as seen in crocodilians, dinosaurs and mammals, and opposed to acrodont and pleurodont dentition seen in squamate reptiles. [1]

  7. Lagerpetidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagerpetidae

    Lagerpetidae (/ ˌ l æ dʒ ər ˈ p ɛ t ɪ d iː /; originally Lagerpetonidae) is a family of basal avemetatarsalians.Though traditionally considered the earliest-diverging dinosauromorphs (reptiles closer to dinosaurs than to pterosaurs), fossils described in 2020 suggest that lagerpetids may instead be pterosauromorphs (closer to pterosaurs).

  8. Theriodontia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theriodontia

    Eutheriodontia refers to all theriodonts except the gorgonopsians (the most "primitive" group). They included the therocephalians and the cynodonts. The cynodonts include the mammals.

  9. Mary Shelton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Shelton

    Mary's two closest friends were Lady Margaret Douglas, a niece of King Henry VIII, and Mary Howard, Duchess of Richmond, wife of the King's illegitimate son, Henry Fitzroy, Duke of Richmond. Shelton was the main editor and a contributor to the famous Devonshire MS, where members of their circle wrote poems they enjoyed or had composed. [7]