Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
†Ambocoelia umbonata – report made of unidentified related form or using admittedly obsolete nomenclature †Ambonychia †Ambonychia carinata †Ambonychia elroyi †Ambonychia obesa †Amphilichas †Amphilichas cucullus – tentative report †Anazyga †Anazyga recurvirostra; Fossil of the Carboniferous horsetail relative Annularia ...
Scaphella – or unidentified comparable form †Schizaropsis †Schizaropsis convexus; Fossil of the Paleocene-recent heart urchin Schizaster Schizaster †Schizaster americanus †Schizaster armiger; Schizomavella †Schizomavella longirostris – type locality for species †Schizopodrella †Schizopodrella viminea †Schizorthosecos
The tusks grew by 2.5–15 cm (0.98–5.91 in) each year. Some cave paintings show woolly mammoths with small or no tusks, but whether this reflected reality or was artistic license is unknown. Female Asian elephants have no tusks, but no fossil evidence indicates that any adult woolly mammoths lacked them. [54] [55]
†Choristites pavlovi – or unidentified comparable form; Fossil of the Carboniferous tabulate coral Cladochonus †Cladochonus †Clathrospira – tentative report †Clavagnostus †Clavagnostus repandus †Cleiothyridina †Cleiothyridina type locality for species A – informal †Cleiothyridina type locality for species B – informal ...
Fossil of the Carboniferous horsetail relative Annularia †Annularia †Annularia asteris †Annularia mucronata †Annularia stellata †Anomphalus †Anoria †Antagmus †Anthracospirifer †Anthracospirifer leidyi †Anthracospirifer newberryi †Anthracospirifer occiduus †Anthracospirifer opimus – or unidentified comparable form
†Pleurocornu amissum – or unidentified comparable form; Fossil of the Silurian-Carboniferous tabulate coral Pleurodictyum †Pleurodictyum †Pleurodictyum cornu †Pleurodictyum cylindricum †Pleurodictyum insigne †Pleurodictyum maximum †Pleurodictyum michelinoidea †Pleurodictyum papillosa †Pleurodictyum planum †Pleurodictyum ...
The specimen consists of a partial cranium preserved on a slab and counterslab, two teeth, four dorsal vertebrae, a wing metacarpal, and other unidentified bone fragments. [1] The fossil material was first reported at an academic conference in 2024 before its formal description. [2]
Fossil of the Middle-Late Ordovician giant trilobite Isotelus. †Isotelus †Isotelus maximus †Kingstonia †Kionoceras †Komaspidella †Kootenia †Krausella †Kutorgina †Labyrinthus †Latouchella; Restoration of the Carboniferous-Late Triassic club moss relative Lepidodendron. Eli Heimans (1911). †Lepidodendron †Levisoceras; Lingula