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How Archaeopteryx climbed trees
P. 246–248.
Zinoviev A.
How Archaeopteryx climbed trees
In book
Vol. 4. , M.: DAAD, 2008.
Zinoviev A., , in: XXth International Congress of Zoology.: P.: UPMC, 2008. P. 30–30.
Some notes on the life style of confuciusornithids (Aves, Confuciusornithiformes, Confuciusornithidae) ...
Added: March 8, 2020
Zinoviev A., Paleontological Journal 2009 Vol. 43 No. 4 P. 444–452
An attempt to reconstruct the lifestyle of confuciusornithids (Aves, Confuciusornithiformes) ...
Added: March 8, 2020
Zinoviev A., , in: Materialien zum wissenschaftlichen Seminar der Stipendiaten der Programm "Michail Lomonosov II" und "Immanuil Kant II" 2008/09Vol. 5.: M.: DAAD, 2009. P. 250–253.
Of Confuciusornis and Phaethon ...
Added: March 8, 2020
Natural History Museum of Vienna Publ., 2012.
8th International Meeting of the Society of Avian Palaeontology and Evolution ...
Added: March 7, 2020
Zinoviev A., , in: 10th Conference of the European Ornithologists' Union.: EOU, 2015.
Comparative anatomy of the intertarsal joint and its bearing on the locomotion of Hesperornis regalis (Hesperornithiformes) and Emeus crassus (Dinornithiformes) ...
Added: March 7, 2020
Zinoviev A., Journal of Ornithology 2015 Vol. 156 No. 1 P. 317–323
Reconstruction of the soft tissues (i.e., collateral ligaments, Lig. anticum, menisci, tendon of the M. fibularis brevis) involved in the mechanism of intertarsal joint stabilization in two species of extinct birds, Hesperornis regalis and Emeus crassus, allowed insights into their locomotion. The foot-propelled diving of Hesperornis included loon-like movement of the tarsometatarsus and grebe-like movement of the toes. Movement of the tarsometatarsus in Emeus was ...
Added: March 7, 2020
Zinoviev A., , in: 12th Conference of the European Ornithologists' Union.: European Ornithologists' Union, 2019. P. 189-190.
New Zealand was inhabited by a number of large flightless birds as well as their aerial predators. One of
such predators was an impressive Haast’s eagle, which extinction coincides with the extinction of the other
New Zealand megafauna. As the earlier predictions on the foraging ecology of Haast’s eagle were based on the
analysis of skeletal elements, I ...
Added: February 14, 2020