All Stories

  1. Chinese fossil protection law and the illegal export of vertebrate fossils from china
  2. Ichthyosaurs from the Jurassic of Skye, Scotland
  3. Fossil protection legislation: Chinese issues, global problems
  4. Alfred Nicholson Leeds and the first fossil egg attributed to a ‘saurian’
  5. A basal thunnosaurian from Iraq reveals disparate phylogenetic origins for Cretaceous ichthyosaurs
  6. From obstetrics to oryctology: inside the mind of William Hunter (1718-1783)
  7. The oldest known metriorhynchid super-predator: a new genus and species from the Middle Jurassic of England, with implications for serration and mandibular evolution in predacious clades
  8. Correction: New Ophthalmosaurid Ichthyosaurs from the European Lower Cretaceous Demonstrate Extensive Ichthyosaur Survival across the Jurassic–Cretaceous Boundary
  9. New Ophthalmosaurid Ichthyosaurs from the European Lower Cretaceous Demonstrate Extensive Ichthyosaur Survival across the Jurassic–Cretaceous Boundary
  10. Phyllocarid crustaceans from the Upper Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia
  11. 100-Million-Year Dynasty of Giant Planktivorous Bony Fishes in the Mesozoic Seas
  12. 2000 A.D. and the new 'Flesh': first to report the dinosaur renaissance in 'moving' pictures
  13. 'Old bones, dry subject': the dinosaurs and pterosaur collected by Alfred Nicholson Leeds of Peterborough, England
  14. THE ALFRED LEEDS FOSSIL VERTEBRATE COLLECTION OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF IRELAND—NATURAL HISTORY
  15. The 'other' Glasgow Boys: the rise and fall of a school of palaeobotany
  16. A re-examination of a Middle Jurassic sauropod limb bone from the Bathonian of the Isle of Skye
  17. The tail of the Jurassic fish Leedsichthys problematicus (Osteichthyes: Actinopterygii) collected by Alfred Nicholson Leeds - an example of the importance of historical records in palaeontology
  18. Pliosaur exoccipital-opisthotic misidentified as Leedsichthys vertebra