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31.
Rico Stecher 《Swiss Journal of Geoscience》2008,101(1):185-201
A new basal non-pterodactyloid pterosaur, Raeticodactylus filisurensis gen. et sp. nov., is reported. It has been discovered in shallow marine sediments from the Upper Triassic of the lowest Kössen beds (late Norian/early Rhaetian boundary) in the central Austroalpine of Canton Grisons (Switzerland). The disarticulated specimen is comprised of an almost complete skull and a partial postcranial skeleton. A high and thin bony, sagittal cranial crest characterizes the anterodorsal region of the skull. The large mandible, with an additional keel-like expansion at the front, partly matches the enlarged sagittal cranial crest. A direct and close relationship to Austriadactylus cristatus, the only known Triassic pterosaur with a bony cranial crest so far, cannot be established. The teeth of the premaxilla are monocuspid and exhibit very strongly bowed enamel wrinkles on the lingual side whereas the enamel is smooth on the labial side. These monocuspid teeth are large and fang-like. The numerous smaller teeth of the maxilla show three, four and five cusps. These are very similar to the teeth of the Triassic pterosaur Eudimorphodon ranzii. The humerus shows a thinner construction than that seen in other Triassic pterosaurs. The femur is quite unusual with a caput femoris perpendicular to the shaft. The bones of the extremities are almost twice as long as the ones from the largest Triassic specimen E. ranzii (MCSNB 2888). The newly described pterosaur is an adult, with a wingspan of approximately 135 cm. A morphofunctional analysis suggests that R. filisurensis was a highly specialized piscivore and possibly a skim-feeder. 相似文献
32.
Flood response to rainfall variability during the last 2000 years inferred from the Taravilla Lake record (Central Iberian Range, Spain) 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Ana Moreno Blas L. Valero-Garcés Penélope González-Sampériz Mayte Rico 《Journal of Paleolimnology》2008,40(3):943-961
A sedimentological, geochemical and palynological study of the Taravilla Lake sequence (Central Iberian Range, NE Spain) provides
a detailed record of allochthonous terrigenous layers that intercalate within the lacustrine sediments over the last 2000 years.
These terrigenous layers are interpreted as the result of extreme hydrological events that caused higher clastic input to
the basin. Anthropogenic influence caused by fires or deforestation is rejected as the main factor generating these layers
because human impact, inferred from the pollen reconstruction, was minimal when the terrigenous layers reached their greatest
frequency. The reconstructed occurrence of these events in the Taravilla Lake record is coherent with the paleoflood history
of the Tagus River, characterized by a notable increase of extreme events at the beginning of the Little Ice Age. The Taravilla
record suggests a relationship between the occurrence of extreme hydrological events, solar variability, and the North Atlantic
Oscillation for the NE Iberian Peninsula. 相似文献