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- Publications
- Influence
REDESCRIPTION OF THE PECTORAL FIN AND VERTEBRAL COLUMN OF THE RHIZODONTID FISH BARAMEDA DECIPIENS FROM THE LOWER CARBONIFEROUS OF AUSTRALIA
- Jillian Garvey, Z. Johanson, A. Warren
- Biology
- 11 March 2005
Abstract The original description of the pectoral fin of the rhizodontid Barameda decipiens emphasized the narrowness of the fin, based on a narrow radius and low number of preserved lepidotrichia.… Expand
Vertebrate microremains from the presumed earliest Carboniferous of the Mansfield Basin, Victoria
- Jillian Garvey, S. Turner
- Geology
- 1 January 2006
Vertebrate microremains from the presumed earliest Tournaisian of the Devil's Plain Formation, Mansfield Group, from the Mansfield Basin, Victoria, are described. Actinopterygian teeth, scales, basal… Expand
Systematic seasonal land use by late Pleistocene Tasmanian Aborigines
- A. Pike-Tay, R. Cosgrove, Jillian Garvey
- Geography
- 1 September 2008
Abstract New research on the odontochronological (dental growth-increment) analysis of marsupial teeth provides opportunities to estimate with more certainty the time of the year Tasmanian Aborigines… Expand
Optimality models and the food quest in Pleistocene Tasmania
- J. Allen, R. Cosgrove, Jillian Garvey
- Biology
- 1 December 2016
Abstract The application of behavioural ecology models to deep time archaeological sites in Australia is often rendered difficult by the poor resolution of the archaeological record coupled with the… Expand
A NEW SPECIES OF BARAMEDA (RHIZODONTIDA) AND HETEROCHRONY IN THE RHIZODONTID PECTORAL FIN
- Timothy Holland, A. Warren, Z. Johanson, J. Long, K. Parker, Jillian Garvey
- Biology
- 12 June 2007
Abstract New material of the Australian Lower Carboniferous rhizodontid Barameda provides additional information on poorly known aspects of rhizodontid anatomy, including the braincase and branchial… Expand
Overdone overkill – the archaeological perspective on Tasmanian megafaunal extinctions
- R. Cosgrove, J. Field, +9 authors J. O'connell
- Geology
- 1 October 2010
Abstract The reasons for megafaunal extinction in Australia have been hotly debated for over 30 years without any clear resolution. The proposed causes include human overkill, climate, anthropogenic… Expand
Modern emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae) butchery, economic utility and analogues for the Australian archaeological record
- Jillian Garvey, B. Cochrane, J. Field, C. Boney
- Biology
- 1 October 2011
Abstract Australia's largest flightless bird, the emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae), has been an important prey animal for Indigenous people for millennia, especially in arid/semi-arid areas where,… Expand
An ichnofossil assemblage from the Lower Carboniferous Snowy Plains Formation, Mansfield Basin, Australia
- Jillian Garvey, S. Hasiotis
- Geology
- 27 February 2008
Abstract Continental strata of the Home Station Sandstone Member of the Snowy Plains Formation of the Mansfield Group, Avon Supergroup, Mansfield Basin in Victoria, Australia, contains diverse and… Expand
Homology of fin lepidotrichia in osteichthyan fishes.
- Z. Johanson, C. Burrow, A. Warren, Jillian Garvey
- Biology
- 1 March 2005
Lepidotrichia are dermal elements located at the distal margin of osteichthyan fins. In sarcopterygians and actinopterygians, the term has been used to denote the most distal bony hemisegments and… Expand
The cascading pathogenic consequences of Sarcoptes scabiei infection that manifest in host disease
- Alynn M Martin, Tamieka A. Fraser, +6 authors S. Carver
- Biology, Medicine
- Royal Society Open Science
- 1 April 2018
Sarcoptic mange, caused by the parasitic mite Sarcoptes scabiei, causes a substantive burden of disease to humans, domestic animals and wildlife, globally. There are many effects of S. scabiei… Expand
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