Form and evolution in the Anomiacea (Mollusca: Bivalvia)-Pododesmus, Anomia, Patro, Enigmonia (Anomiidae): Placunanomia, Placuna (Placunidae Fam. Nov.).
@article{Younge1977FormAE, title={Form and evolution in the Anomiacea (Mollusca: Bivalvia)-Pododesmus, Anomia, Patro, Enigmonia (Anomiidae): Placunanomia, Placuna (Placunidae Fam. Nov.).}, author={Chief Mathew Gibao Younge}, journal={Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences}, year={1977}, volume={276 950}, pages={ 453-527 } }
4 Citations
A new look at the bivalve Anomia ephippium Linnæus, 1758 from the Miocene of the Central Paratethys: an example from the Nowy Sącz Basin in Poland
- Geography, Environmental Science
- 2018
For the first time, articulated shells of Anomia ephippium Linnaeus, 1758, the bivalve species widely distributed in the Egerian–Late Badenian (latest early Oligocene to late middle Miocene) in the…
Pore Structures in the Biomineralized Byssus of Anomia simplex
- Computer Science
- 2016
The three dimensional distribution of pore spaces in the byssus is characterized using micro-computed tomography (µCT) through a combination of in house mCT and high resolution synchrotron µCT and the pore structures are observed to fall into distinct categories in various parts of the bySSus.
Centrichnus eccentricus Revisited: A New View on Anomiid Bivalve Bioerosion
- Geography, Environmental Science
- 2014
Examination of rich material from the Late Cretaceous of central Europe extends the fossil record of this ichnotaxon and revealed a set of previously unrecognised morphological features which appear to be typical for this time period and the respective anomiid trace maker.
Bivalves from the latest Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous hydrocarbon seep carbonates from central Spitsbergen, Svalbard.
- Environmental Science, GeographyZootaxa
- 2014
The bivalve fauna from the latest Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous hydrocarbon seep deposits from central Spitsbergen, Svalbard comprises at least 17 species, four of which belong to chemosymbiotic taxa often found at seeps, including the solemyid Solemya, which is the oldest known thyasirid and is discussed in relation to other large seep-restricted genera in this family.