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THE CRETACEOUS BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN WITH A DESCRIPTION OF A NEW BASAL MOSASAUROID FROM 'EIN YABRUD, ISRAEL
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- Polcyn Michael J.
- Shuler Museum of Paleontology, Southern Methodist University
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- Tchernov Eitan
- Dept. of Evolution, Systematics and Ecology, The Hebrew University
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- Jacobs Louis L.
- Shuler Museum of Paleontology, Southern Methodist University
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Description
The Cenomanian fauna of 'Ein Yabrud, Israel, contains a suite of marine lepidosaurs, including a new, basal mosasauroid, similar to those from Cretaceous shallow marine carbonate settings in Italy and Croatia. Plate tectonic models indicate Early Cretaceous rifting of continental crust from the northeastern portion of Africa with subsequent northward drifting and incorporation into southern Europe. Eustatic curves indicate generally lower sea levels prior to the middle Albian than later in the Cretaceous. Therefore, terrestrial vertebrates of Early Cretaceous age in the eastern Mediterranean are likely of Gondwana origin. Southern European Early Cretaceous dinosaur bones, including the skeleton of the maniraptoran Scipionyx, footprints, and lepidosaurs were implaced as biogeographic voyagers on beached Viking funeral ships, derived initially from Africa and accreted onto Europe. The inundated Apulian Platform and related carbonate shelves supported a tropical marine lepidosaur fauna, including aigialosaurs, coniasaurs, and the earliest documented invasion of the sea by snakes.
Journal
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- National Science Museum monographs
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National Science Museum monographs 15 259-290, 1999
National Science Museum
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Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1573105976787160832
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- NII Article ID
- 110004312502
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- NII Book ID
- AA1102331X
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- ISSN
- 13429574
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- Text Lang
- en
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- Data Source
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- CiNii Articles