Team Publications

"Thecodontosaurus antiquus is a basal sauropodomorph from the Rhaetian locality of Durdham Down in Bristol, U.K. Sauropodomorph material putatively assigned to this species was found at the nearby site of Tytherington. Here, we describe the Tytherington specimens and compare them with T. antiquus a...

Category: Team Publications

"Simulations are playing an increasingly important role in paleobiology. When designing a simulation study, many decisions have to be made and common challenges will be encountered along the way. Here, we outline seven rules for executing a good simulation study. We cover topics including the choic...

Category: Team Publications

"Results Plant life-forms and PFTs showed a clear pattern within geographic but also climate space, while topography had a minor effect. Phanerophytes mainly contributed to the flora in humid areas. Chamaephytes and hemicryptophytes most strongly contributed to the summit scrub flora and, to some d...

Category: Team Publications

In April 2020 the SVP sent a letter to more than 300 paleontology journals with proposals for "significant changes to the common practices in palaeontology". Carolin Haug and more than 40 colleagues welcome the initiative but consider the proposals to be counter-productive. The authors explain t...

Category: News, Team Publications

"Calcareous red algae have been important components in reefal facies since the Mesozoic but their volumetric contribution to Palaeozoic reefs was usually low. Here, we report a reef-building community dominated by Parachaetetes, a genus of solenoporacean red algae, overgrowing uppermost Permian sp...

Category: Team Publications

"During the GOBE biodiversity increased remarkedly. Origination and extinction appears similar across diverse groups and geographical areas. This study focuses on hard substrate taxa and results indicate that there was a common cause of Ordovician diversification dynamics"The Great Ordovician Biodi...

Category: Team Publications

"Trilobites offer insight into the growth and development of fossil ecdysozoans. Elrathia kingii (Meek) is used to estimate growth rates and describe shape change over the ontogeny. The rate of cephalic shape change in E. kingii decreased at the transition from meraspis to holaspis, while the pygid...

Category: Team Publications