Publisher: The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
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Below are lists of this title's Most Read and Most Recently Cited articles. The Most Read articles are the articles which have been downloaded the most on the new platform. The Most Recently Cited articles list uses Crossref cited-by data (downloaded on the 1st and 15th of each month) to automatically identify papers which have received the most new citations over the last month. The articles that appear here are not those which have received the most citations in total, but rather the articles which have been cited most often most recently.
SKELETAL AND DENTAL ANATOMY OF LAMNIFORM SHARK, CRETALAMNA APPENDICULATA, FROM UPPER CRETACEOUS NIOBRARA CHALK OF KANSAS
Kenshu Shimada. (2007)
FIRST WELL-ESTABLISHED TRACK-TRACKMAKER ASSOCIATION OF PALEOZOIC TETRAPODS BASED ON ICHNIOTHERIUM TRACKWAYS AND DIADECTID SKELETONS FROM THE LOWER PERMIAN OF GERMANY
SEBASTIAN VOIGT, et al. (2007)
Bistahieversor sealeyi, gen. et sp. nov., a New Tyrannosauroid from New Mexico and the Origin of Deep Snouts in Tyrannosauroidea
Thomas D. Carr, et al. (2010)
New Carcharhiniform Sharks (Chondrichthyes, Elasmobranchii) from the Early to Middle Eocene of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula
Andrea Engelbrecht, et al. (2017)
MY THEROPOD IS BIGGER THAN YOURS … OR NOT: ESTIMATING BODY SIZE FROM SKULL LENGTH IN THEROPODS
FRANÇOIS THERRIEN, et al. (2007)
A PROPOSAL FOR A STANDARD TERMINOLOGY OF ANATOMICAL NOTATION AND ORIENTATION IN FOSSIL VERTEBRATE DENTITIONS
JOSHUA B. SMITH, et al. (2003)
CRANIOFACIAL ANATOMY OF MAJUNGASAURUS CRENATISSIMUS (THEROPODA: ABELISAURIDAE) FROM THE LATE CRETACEOUS OF MADAGASCAR
SCOTT D. SAMPSON, et al. (2007)
LONG BONE HISTOLOGY OF THE HADROSAURID DINOSAUR MAIASAURA PEEBLESORUM: GROWTH DYNAMICS AND PHYSIOLOGY BASED ON AN ONTOGENETIC SERIES OF SKELETAL ELEMENTS
JOHN R. HORNER, et al. (2000)
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