All Stories

  1. Late Ordovician Mass Extinction: Earth, fire and ice.
  2. SILURIAN BRACHIOPODS FROM THE PENTLAND HILLS, SCOTLAND
  3. A journey through the Ordovician System around the world
  4. Changing palaeobiogeography during the Ordovician Period
  5. The Ordovician System: Key concepts, events and its distribution across Europe
  6. Did the Late Ordovician mass extinction event trigger the earliest evolution of ‘strophodontoid’ brachiopods?
  7. Fossils in the mountains: Understanding the relationship between biodiversity and geography during the Early Palaeozoic
  8. A synopsis of the Ordovician System in its birthplace – Britain and Ireland
  9. The Ordovician System in Greenland
  10. A short history of the Ordovician System: from overlapping unit stratotypes to global stratotype sections and points
  11. The Ordovician of Scandinavia: a revised regional stage classification
  12. An enigmatic large discoidal fossil from the Pennsylvanian of County Clare, Ireland
  13. Cambrian and earliest Ordovician fauna and geology of the Sông Đà and adjacent terranes in Việt Nam (Vietnam)
  14. Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) conodonts from southern Tibet, the Indian passive margin: implications for the age and correlation of the roof of the world
  15. Early Palaeozoic diversifications and extinctions in the marine biosphere: a continuum of change
  16. From shallow to deep water: an ecological study of the Hirnantia brachiopod Fauna (Late Ordovician) and its global implications
  17. A nearshore Hirnantian brachiopod fauna from South China and its ecological significance
  18. The Sirius Passet Lagerstätte of North Greenland: a remote window on the Cambrian Explosion
  19. The giants of the phylum Brachiopoda: a matter of diet?
  20. A newCathaysiorthis(Brachiopoda) fauna from the lower Llandovery of eastern Qinling, China
  21. Synoptic revision of the Silurian fauna from the Pentland Hills, Scotland described by Lamont (1978)
  22. New records of brachiopods and crinoids from the Silurian (Wenlock) of the southern Urals, Russia
  23. Brain and eyes of Kerygmachela reveal protocerebral ancestry of the panarthropod head
  24. The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE): definition, concept and duration
  25. Periodicity in extinction rates
  26. The dawn of a dynasty: life strategies of Cambrian and Ordovician brachiopods
  27. Brachiopods: origin and early history
  28. Brachiopod faunas after the end Ordovician mass extinction from South China: Testing ecological change through a major taxonomic crisis
  29. Echinoids as hard substrates: varied examples from the Oligocene of Antigua, Lesser Antilles
  30. Mass extinctions over the last 500 myr: an astronomical cause?
  31. Notes on the brachiopod species from the Silurian of the Pentland Hills described by Lamont (1978)
  32. Anthropocene: keep communication clear
  33. Late Ordovician deep-water brachiopod fauna from Raheen, Waterford Harbour, Ireland
  34. Minerals in the gut: scoping a Cambrian digestive system
  35. Permian–Triassic evolution of the Bivalvia: Extinction-recovery patterns linked to ecologic and taxonomic selectivity
  36. Shell-Filled Burrows in the Upper Oligocene Antigua Formation, Antigua, Lesser Antilles
  37. Silurian of the Midland Valley of Scotland and Ireland
  38. Biogeographic and bathymetric determinants of brachiopod extinction and survival during the Late Ordovician mass extinction
  39. The Sirius Passet Lagerstätte: silica death masking opens the window on the earliest matground community of the Cambrian explosion
  40. Hirnantian (Late Ordovician) brachiopod faunas across Baltoscandia: A global and regional context
  41. Onset of main Phanerozoic marine radiation sparked by emerging Mid Ordovician icehouse
  42. A Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician) bivalve-dominated molluscan fauna from the Stairway Sandstone, Amadeus Basin, central Australia
  43. Paleobiogeography and Fossils
  44. Ordovician Gastropoda from Northeast Greenland
  45. Trace fossils from the lower Cambrian Kløftelv Formation, Ella Ø, North-East Greenland
  46. Neogene echinoids from the Cayman Islands, West Indies: regional implications
  47. Occurrences of the cool-water dalmanelloid brachiopodHeterorthinain the Upper Ordovician of North America
  48. Ecosystem revolution and evolution in the Early–Mid Paleozoic
  49. The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event: Reviewing two decades of research on diversity's big bang illustrated by mainly brachiopod data
  50. Lower and Middle Ordovician conodonts of Laurentian affinity from blocks of limestone in the Rosroe Formation, South Mayo Trough, western Ireland and their palaeogeographic implication
  51. The Contribution of William King to the Early Development of Palaeoanthropology
  52. In deep water: a crinoid-brachiopod association in the Upper Oligocene of Antigua, West Indies
  53. Late OrdovicianHolorhynchussuccession in the Siljan district, Sweden: facies, faunas and a latest Katian event
  54. An earth system approach to understanding the end-Ordovician (Hirnantian) mass extinction
  55. The Upper Oligocene of Antigua: the volcanic to limestone transition in a limestone Caribbee
  56. End Ordovician extinctions: A coincidence of causes
  57. A suspension-feeding anomalocarid from the Early Cambrian
  58. Synoptic revision of the Ordovician brachiopods of the Barr and Lower Ardmillan groups of the Girvan area, Scotland
  59. Field biology (third edition) by EsbernWarncke. Narayana Press, Gylling [available as e-book from www.saxo.com]. No. of pages: 302. Price: UK£22.50. ISBN 978-87-996087-0-6 (hardback).
  60. Test of sampling sufficiency in palaeontology
  61. Late Ordovician carbonate mounds from North Greenland: a peri-Laurentian dimension to the Boda Event?
  62. Possible oceanic circulation patterns, surface water currents and upwelling zones in the Early Palaeozoic
  63. Neoichnology and implications for stratigraphy of reworked Upper Oligocene oysters, Antigua, West Indies
  64. Middle Ordovician brachiopods from the Stairway Sandstone, Amadeus Basin, central Australia
  65. The Hirnantia (Late Ordovician) brachiopod fauna of the East Baltic: Taxonomy of the key species
  66. Middle OrdovicianAporthophylabrachiopod fauna from the roof of the World, southern Tibet
  67. Causes of the Cambrian Explosion
  68. Trilobites from the Middle Ordovician Stairway Sandstone, Amadeus Basin, central Australia
  69. P. Upchurch, A. J. McGowan & C. S. C. Slater (eds). 2011. Palaeogeography and Palaeobiogeography: Biodiversity in Space and Time. Systematics Association Special Volume Series 77. 239pp. CRC Press. Price £76.99. ISBN 978 1 420 04551 2 (HB).
  70. Bivalve mollusks in metal pollution studies: From bioaccumulation to biomonitoring
  71. Morphofunctional analysis ofSvobodainaspecies (Brachiopoda, Heterorthidae) from south-western Europe
  72. Moulting in the lobopodianOnychodictyonfrom the lower Cambrian of Greenland
  73. A starfish bed in the Middle Miocene Grand Bay Formation of Carriacou, The Grenadines (West Indies)
  74. Reappraisal of the brachiopodAcrotreta socialisvon Seebach, 1865: clarifying 150 years of confusion
  75. The evolving continents: understanding processes of continental growth, edited by T.M.Kusky, M.-G.Zhai and W.Xiao. Geological Society Special Publication,338, London, 2010. No. of pages: 414. Price: UK£100-00. ISBN 978-1-86239-303-5 (hardback).
  76. Ontogenic study of the brachiopodDicoelosiaby geometric morphometrics and morphing techniques
  77. A new survivor species of Dicoelosia (Brachiopoda) from Rhuddanian (Silurian) shallower-water biofacies in South China
  78. Ancestral billingsellides and the evolution and phylogenetic relationships of early rhynchonelliform brachiopods
  79. Late Ordovician brachiopod distribution and ecospace partitioning in the Tvären crater system, Sweden
  80. Arthroaspis n. gen., a common element of the Sirius Passet Lagerstätte (Cambrian, North Greenland), sheds light on trilobite ancestry
  81. A bradoriid and brachiopod dominated shelly fauna from the Furongian (Cambrian) of Västergötland, Sweden
  82. Chapter 11 Biodiversity, biogeography and phylogeography of Ordovician rhynchonelliform brachiopods
  83. Chapter 1 Early Palaeozoic biogeography and palaeogeography: towards a modern synthesis
  84. Chapter 3 Palaeozoic palaeogeographical and palaeobiogeographical nomenclature
  85. Late Ordovician massive-bedded Thalassinoides ichnofacies along the palaeoequator of Laurentia
  86. Precisely locating the Ordovician equator in Laurentia
  87. Shell malformations in seven species of pond snail (Gastropoda, Lymnaeidae): analysis of large museum collections
  88. A primitive cladid crinoid from the Jiacun Group, Tibet (Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician)
  89. A sulfidic driver for the end-Ordovician mass extinction
  90. Nonbiomineralized carapaces in Cambrian seafloor landscapes (Sirius Passet, Greenland): Opening a new window into early Phanerozoic benthic ecology
  91. Late Ordovician brachiopods from West-central Alaska: systematics, ecology and palaeobiogeography
  92. Corals and other reef-builders
  93. Did the amalgamation of continents drive the end Ordovician mass extinctions?
  94. Fossils from the Lower Lias of the Dorset coast, edited by Alan R. Lord and Paul G. Davis. The Palaeontological Association, field guide to fossils 13, London, 2010. No. of pages: 436. Price: £18-00. ISBN 978-1-4443-3774-7 (softback).
  95. Does radioactive contamination affect the shell morphology of the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis in the exclusion zone of the Chernobyl NPP (Ukraine)?
  96. Early Palaeozoic ecosystems, environments and evolution: a synopsis
  97. An Early Cambrian stem polychaete with pygidial cirri
  98. Patrick John Brenchley (1936-2011)
  99. Interrogation of distributional data for the End Ordovician crisis interval: where did disaster strike?
  100. Vetulicolians from the Lower Cambrian Sirius Passet Lagerstätte, North Greenland, and the polarity of morphological characters in basal deuterostomes
  101. Revision of the Ordovician brachiopod genus Noetlingia Hall and Clarke, 1893
  102. Lethaia Focus
  103. The oldest brachiopods from the lower Cambrian of South Australia
  104. Revision of the plectorthoid brachiopod Platystrophia dentata (Pander, 1830) from the Middle Ordovician of the East Baltic
  105. Chapter 56 Neoproterozoic (Cryogenian-Ediacaran) deposits in East and North-East Greenland
  106. Palaeoenvironmental aspects of Late Ordovician Sericoidea shell concentrations in an impact crater, Tvären, Sweden
  107. Nurse logs and nurse crinoids? A palaeobotanical concept applied to fossil crinoids
  108. Ordovician and Silurian sea–water chemistry, sea level, and climate: A synopsis
  109. How does sea level correlate with sea-water chemistry? A progress report from the Ordovician and Silurian
  110. Late Ordovician shelly faunas from Jämtland: palaeocommunity development along the margin of the Swedish Caledonides
  111. Cambrian rocks and faunas of the Wachi La, Black Mountains, Bhutan
  112. Unravelling a Late Ordovician pentameride (Brachiopoda) hotspot from the Boda Limestone, Siljan district, central Sweden
  113. The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE): The palaeoecological dimension
  114. The Ordovician brachiopod radiation: Roles of alpha, beta, and gamma diversity
  115. Carbon-isotope stratigraphy of the Lower Ordovician succession in Northeast Greenland: Implications for correlations with St. George Group in western Newfoundland (Canada) and beyond
  116. Synchrotron radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy (SRXTM) of brachiopod shell interiors for taxonomy: Preliminary report
  117. Late Ordovician (Sandbian) brachiopods from the Mweelrea Formation, South Mayo, western Ireland: stratigraphic and tectonic implications
  118. Can the Lilliput Effect be detected in the brachiopod faunas of South China following the terminal Ordovician mass extinction?
  119. Taphonomy of Logs Bored withTeredolites longissimusKelly and Bromley in the Danian (Lower Paleocene) of West Greenland
  120. Late Ordovician (Katian) brachiopods from the Southern Uplands of Scotland: biogeographic patterns on the edge of Laurentia
  121. Ecostratigraphical interpretation of lower Middle Ordovician East Baltic sections based on brachiopods
  122. Barbados
  123. Editorial developments atLethaia
  124. SULCIPENTAMERUS(PENTAMERIDA, BRACHIOPODA) FROM THE LOWER SILURIAN WASHINGTON LAND GROUP, NORTH GREENLAND
  125. Understanding the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE): Influences of paleogeography, paleoclimate, or paleoecology
  126. Ordovician life around the Celtic fringes: diversifications, extinctions and migrations of brachiopod and trilobite faunas at middle latitudes
  127. Generation of brachiopod-dominated shell beds in the Miocene rocks of Carriacou, Lesser Antilles
  128. Resolving early Mid-Ordovician (Kundan) bioevents in the East Baltic based on brachiopods
  129. SILURIAN - LOWER DEVONIAN BLACK SHALES IN MOROCCO: WHICH ARE THE ORGANICALLY RICHEST HORIZONS?
  130. New endemic brachiopod and echinoderm genera from the Upper Ordovician of the St. Petersburg region, northwestern Russia
  131. Latest Ordovician brachiopod and trilobite assemblage from Yuhang, northern Zhejiang, East China: a window on Hirnantian deep-water benthos
  132. Completeness of the Hirnantian brachiopod record: Spatial heterogeneity through the end Ordovician extinction event
  133. A route to recovery: The early Silurian shallow-water shelly fauna in the northern Oslo basin
  134. The late Sandbian – earliest Katian (Ordovician) brachiopod immigration and its influence on the brachiopod fauna in the Oslo Region, Norway
  135. Asteroid breakup linked to the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event
  136. The root of the problem: palaeoecology of distinctive crinoid attachment structures from the Silurian (Wenlock) of Gotland
  137. The Ordovician-Silurian boundary and the Hirnantia fauna
  138. Preface
  139. Brachiopod biofacies in the Barr and Ardmillan groups, Girvan: Ordovician biodiversity trends on the edge of Laurentia
  140. The brachiopods Alwynella and Grorudia: homeomorphic plectambonitoids in the Middle and Upper Ordovician of Baltoscandia
  141. An ordovician fauna from Lough Shee, Partry Mountains, Co. Mayo, Ireland
  142. The stratigraphy of the Drummuck Group (Ashgill), Girvan
  143. Petalocrinus (Echinodermata, Crinoidea) from the Llandovery (Lower Silurian; Rhudannian) of the Girvan district, SW Scotland
  144. Changes in Lethaia and Fossils and Strata
  145. The latest Ordovician Hirnantia Fauna (Brachiopoda) in time and space
  146. A relict Ordovician brachiopod fauna from the Parakidograptus acuminatus Biozone (lower Silurian) of the English Lake District
  147. Baltica: A mid Ordovician diversity hotspot
  148. Biotic diachroneity during the Ordovician Radiation: evidence from South China
  149. The Ordovician biodiversification: Setting an agenda for marine life
  150. Global analyses of brachiopod faunas through the Ordovician and Silurian transition: reducing the role of the Lazarus effect
  151. Paleontological Data Analysis
  152. SILICIFIED RHYNCHONELLIFORM BRACHIOPODS FROM THE KUNIUTAN FORMATION (DARRIWILIAN: MIDDLE ORDOVICIAN), GUIYANG, SOUTH CHINA
  153. A late Ordovician (Hirnantian) karstic surface in a submarine channel, recording glacio-eustatic sea-level changes: Meifod, central Wales
  154. Lipanorthis Benedetto from the Tremadocian of NW Argentina reidentified as a dalmanellidine: Significance for the origin and early radiation of the punctate orthide brachiopods
  155. Changes to Lethaia
  156. Tropical marine environments through time: an introduction
  157. The Miocene palaeobathymetry and palaeoenvironments of Carriacou, the Grenadines, Lesser Antilles
  158. Llandovery Crinoidea of the British Isles, including description of a new species from the Kilbride Formation (Telychian) of western Ireland
  159. A Silurian (Llandovery) Eoplectodonta Shell Bed in Western Ireland: the Role of Opportunism, Storms and Sedimentation Rates in its Formation
  160. Geochemistry and potential correlation of Silurian (Telychian) metabentonites from Ireland and SW Scotland
  161. The latest Ordovician Hirnantia Fauna (Brachiopoda) in time and space
  162. The Lady Burn Starfish Beds
  163. A relict Ordovician brachiopod fauna from the Parakidograptus acuminatus Biozone (lower Silurian) of the English Lake District
  164. Foliomena Fauna (Brachiopoda) from the Upper Ordovician of Sardinia
  165. Money and Alertness
  166. Early Ordovician rhynchonelliformean brachiopod biodiversity: comparing some platforms, margins and intra-oceanic sites around the Iapetus Ocean
  167. Brachiopod/crinoid associations in the late Cenozoic of the Antillean region
  168. Distribution and diversity of Ordovician articulated brachiopods in the East Baltic
  169. Preface: History of Biodiversity
  170. Fossils in mountain belts
  171. Palaeozoic brachiopod extinctions, survival and recovery: patterns within the rhynchonelliformeans
  172. The development of an atypical Hirnantia-brachiopod Fauna and the onset of glaciation in the late Ordovician of Gondwana
  173. Palaeozoic brachiopod extinctions, survival and recovery: patterns within the rhynchonelliformeans
  174. Preface: History of Biodiversity
  175. Late Ordovician to earliest Silurian graptolite and brachiopod biozonation from the Yangtze region, South China, with a global correlation
  176. Late Ordovician brachiopod biofacies of the Girvan district, SW Scotland
  177. Scottish Silurian shorelines
  178. Brachiopod survival and recovery from the latest Ordovician mass extinctions in South China
  179. Late Ordovician (Caradoc-Ashgill) Brachiopod Faunas with Foliomena Based on Data from China
  180. A new paleobathymetric interpretation of the middle miocene grand bay formation of Carriacou (Grenadines, lesser antilles)
  181. Basal Wenlock biofacies from the Girvan district, SW Scotland
  182. Palaeobiogeography
  183. Populations and communities
  184. Fossils as environmental indicators
  185. Environmental controls on biotic distribution
  186. Adaptive morphology
  187. Fossil terrestrial ecosystems
  188. Trace fossils
  189. Taphonomy
  190. Evolutionary palaeoecology of the marine biosphere
  191. Investigating the history of the biosphere
  192. Diving deep on a Pleistocene reef in eastern Jamaica
  193. Fossils explained 20: Brachiopod life styles
  194. Book review: EVOLUTIONARY PALEOBIOLOGY edited by David Jablonski, Douglas H. Erwin and Jere H. Lipps, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 1996. No. of pages: 484+vii. Price: US$80, UK£63.95 (hardback); US$29.95, UK£23.95 (paperback). ISBN ...
  195. Palaeoecology
  196. A Late Cretaceous terebratulid brachiopod from Jamaica, and its significance for Mesozoic brachiopod palaeobiogeography and evolution
  197. Late Llandovery thelodonts and conodonts from the Kilbride Formation, Co. Galway, western Ireland
  198. The trilobites and brachiopods of the Wrae Limestone, an Ordovician limestone conglomerate in the Southern Uplands
  199. Book Review: Caribbean Geology: An Introduction, edited by Stephen K. Donovan and Trevor A. Jackson. University of the West Indies Publishers' Association (UWIPA), PO Box 42, Mona, Kingston 7, Jamaica, 1994. No. of pages: 289. Price: US$27 (softback in...
  200. The palaeogeography of early Ordovician Iapetus terranes: an integration of faunal and palaeomagnetic constraints
  201. Mid-Dinantian brachiopod biofacies from western Ireland
  202. Taxonomy and palaeoecology of the mollusc Pterotheca from the Ordovician and Silurian of Scotland
  203. The palaeobiology of trace fossils edited by Stephen K. Donovan. Wiley, Chichester, 1994. No. of pages: 308. Price: £39.95 ($63.95) (hardback) ISBN 0471 948438
  204. Palaeoecology and palaeobathymetry of Pleistocene brachiopods from the Manchioneal Formation of Jamaica
  205. A revision of Ordovician series and stages from the historical type area
  206. Kissinella-Christiania Associations in the early Ashgill Foliomena brachiopod fauna of South China
  207. An endemic brachiopod fauna from the Middle Ordovician of North Wales
  208. Cretaceous and Cenozoic Brachiopoda of Jamaica
  209. Fossils in fold belts
  210. Fossils in fold belts
  211. Ordovician provincial signals from Appalachian- Caledonian terranes
  212. Ordovician faunas in mass-flow deposits, Southern Scotland
  213. The Ordovician biogeography of the Grangegeeth terrane and the Iapetus suture zone in eastern Ireland
  214. End-Silurian modifications of Ordovician terranes in western Ireland
  215. Cambrian-Ordovician paleogeography of Baltica
  216. Towards a statistical system for palaeontologists
  217. The Iapetus suture in the British Isles – comment on its position in eastern Ireland
  218. Short Paper: Stratigraphical correlations adjacent to the Highland Boundary fault in the west of Ireland
  219. Short Paper: Palaeontological constraints on the definition and development of Irish Caledonide terranes
  220. Stratigraphy and faunas of the Parautochthon and Lower Allochthon of southern Norway
  221. A basin model for the Silurian of the Midland Valley of Scotland and Ireland
  222. The Ordovician-Silurian boundary and the Hirnantia fauna
  223. A global synthesis of the latest Ordovician Hirnantian brachiopod faunas
  224. Arenig-Llandovery stratigraphy and faunas across the Scandinavian Caledonides
  225. Geology and paleobiology of islands in the Ordovician Iapetus Ocean: Discussion and reply
  226. Ordovician gastropods from Vardofjället, Swedish Lapland, and the dating of Caledonian serpentinite conglomerates: A discussion
  227. Ordovician fish spines from Girvan, Scotland
  228. The environmental significance of some faunal changes in the Upper Ardmillan succession (upper Ordovician), Girvan, Scotland
  229. The occurrence of the Ordovician brachiopod Heterorthis alternata (J. de C. Sowerby) in the topmost Onnian of the type Caradoc area
  230. Evolution and Climate Change