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  • Specimen  (7)
  • Earth Sciences; Paleontology  (4)
  • Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)  (7)
  • Berlin/Heidelberg  (4)
  • London : The Geological Society
  • English  (11)
  • Chinese
  • Danish
  • Romanian
  • Turkish
  • 2015-2019  (11)
  • 1945-1949
Collection
Publisher
Language
  • English  (11)
  • Chinese
  • Danish
  • Romanian
  • Turkish
Years
  • 2015-2019  (11)
  • 1945-1949
Year
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-04-27
    Description: The range of substrates that the bone-eating marine worm Osedax is able to consume has important implications for its evolutionary history, especially its potential link to the rise of whales. Once considered a whale specialist, recent work indicates that Osedax consumes a wide range of vertebrate remains, including whale soft tissue and the bones of mammals, birds and fishes. Traces resembling those produced by living Osedax have now been recognized for the first time in Oligocene whale teeth and fish bones from deep-water strata of the Makah, Pysht and Lincoln Creek formations in western Washington State, USA. The specimens were acid etched from concretions, and details of the borehole morphology were investigated using micro-computed tomography. Together with previously published Osedax traces from this area, our results show that by Oligocene time Osedax was able to colonize the same range of vertebrate remains that it consumes today and had a similar diversity of root morphologies. This supports the view that a generalist ability to exploit vertebrate bones may be an ancestral trait of Osedax.
    Keywords: Deep-sea; Trace fossil; Osedax; Whale; Fish; Micro-CT; Tiefsee; Spurenfossil; Osedax; Wal; Fisch; Micro-CT ; 551 ; Earth Sciences; Paleontology
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 2
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    Springer-Verlag | Berlin/Heidelberg
    Publication Date: 2021-04-25
    Description: Aspidochirote holothurian ossicles were discovered in Upper Ordovician-aged Öjlemyr cherts from Gotland, Sweden. The well-preserved material allows definitive assignment to the family Synallactidae, a deep-sea sea cucumber group that is distributed worldwide today. The new taxon Tribrachiodemas ordovicicus gen. et sp. nov. is described, representing the oldest member of the Aspidochirotida. The further fossil record of Synallactidae and evolutionary implications are also discussed.
    Keywords: Echinodermata; Holothuroidea; Ordovician; Sweden; Baltic Sea; Echinodermata; Holothuroidea; Ordovizium; Schweden; Ostsee ; 551 ; Earth Sciences; Paleontology
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-04-24
    Description: The northern German Lower Cretaceous Bückeberg Formation yields numerous dinosaur tracksites, some of which have produced material of impressive quality. Stratigraphically, the localities are concentrated in the Obernkirchen Sandstone, a thin subunit within this formation. The Obernkirchen Sandstone represents mainly a sandy barrier to back-barrier and lagoonal setting within a limnic deltaic facies complex, which was deposited during the late Berriasian (Cypridea alta formosa ostracod subzone) in the southeast of the Lower Saxony Basin, northwest Germany. A few tracksites occur more proximally in coeval fluvial deposits. Dinosaur footprint assemblages were left by ornithopods, theropods, sauropods, ankylosaurs, and small, bipedal ornithischians. Other vertebrate tracks are those of turtles and, possibly, crocodilians. Due to the decrease in sandstone quarrying in recent decades, many old tracksites are inaccessible today. Additionally, historical descriptions of the tracks were of highly variable quality and often published in remote and today nearly unobtainable sources. Here we provide a catalogue of 13 tracksites compiled from the literature and some new observations. Of these 13 tracksites, only five are still accessible and currently under study. Descriptions of each locality are provided, with a comprehensive compilation of existing data on lithofacies, stratigraphy, palaeogeography and palaeoecology of the Obernkirchen Sandstone and equivalent strata. A short review of the track-bearing lithofacies assemblage indicates that the outcrop areas have distinctly different facies and environments, and, therefore, track-bearing horizons can only be correlated stratigraphically between adjacent outcrops. For this reason, the identification of a megatracksite in the Obernkirchen Sandstone is currently regarded as premature and uncertain.
    Keywords: Vertebrate tracks; Dinosauria; Cretaceous; Berriasian; Obernkirchen; Münchehagen; Germany; Wirbeltier-Fährten; Dinosauria; Kreide; Berriasium; Obernkirchen; Münchehagen; Deutschland ; 551 ; Earth Sciences; Paleontology
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-04-25
    Description: The morphologically conspicuous bivalve Oxytoma (Palmoxytoma) cygnipes (Young & Bird, 1822), known for its palaeogeographically bipolar distribution, from a limestone bed in the boundary “Belemniten–Schichten”/Amaltheenton formation, Lower Jurassic, in N Germany is described. The occurrence of this palaeoceanographically significant bivalve points to an influx of cool seawater from the Arctic to the North-German Basin at the base of the Upper Pliensbachian, just before the deposition of the Amaltheenton formation. A review of previously reported occurrences on the NW European Shelf indicates two distinct stratigraphic intervals of occurrence of this taxon: the Rhaetian–Hettangian boundary and the Upper Pliensbachian. Whereas the former interval of occurrence may be related to short-term cooling in the course of the end-Triassic extinction event, the latter is interpreted as reflecting the influx of a cool water current to the eastern part of the NW European Shelf, which continued southwards parallel to the coast of the Bohemian–Vindelician High.
    Keywords: Bivalvia; Germany; Triassic–Jurassic boundary; Pliensbachian; Boreal; Bivalvia; Deutschland; Trias–Jura-Grenze; Pliensbachium; Boreal ; 551 ; Earth Sciences; Paleontology
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 5
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    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    In:  Garland Allen Collection
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: Photo of an egg dissection under a microscope; cropped to include two hands holding dissection utensils
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
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  • 6
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    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    In:  Garland Allen Collection
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: Illustration of egg micorsurgery
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
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  • 7
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    Unknown
    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    In:  Garland Allen Collection
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: 1954
    Description: Image of sarcoma 180 induced fiber growth
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
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  • 8
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    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: Black and white photograph of microscopic image of sand dollar embryo. The image shows four cells with the birefringence of the spindle fibers contained within them. Whether the birefringence is bright or dark depends on the orientation of the spindle. The main object of polarized light microscopy is contrast, and this is evident in this picture. Shinya has written on the back of the photograph: 75e22I From 17A RCF-3.5 15sec@F/11 2mD
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
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  • 9
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    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: Polarizing microscopical images of crystals of Green Fluorescent Protein. This work, with Inoue conducted with Osamu Shimomura and others, has shown that it is possible for researchers to identify the orientation of GFP in cells, as well as its presence or absence.
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
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  • 10
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    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: Black and white photograph of polarizing microscopy of the mitotic spindle of the endosperm. The two columns depict images obtained with different rotations of the compensator. The top row depicts the cell during metaphase, the bottom four rows depict, from the second row down to the fifth, progression through anaphase.
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
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  • 11
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    Arizona Board of Regents | Marine Biological Laboratory (Woods Hole, Mass.)
    Publication Date: 2023-01-12
    Description: Polarizing microscopical image of cave cricket sperm. The patterns of birefringence in the upper half of the sperm displays the different regions of the DNA. The dark region below the middle of the sperm has been irradiated with UV. The five images were taken at different rotational angles of the compensator, which allow light of different polarizations to pass through.
    Keywords: Specimen
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Language: English
    Type: Still Image
    Format: image/tif
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