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FEATURED ARTICLE

A fork-tailed coelacanth, Rebellatrix divaricerca, gen. et sp. nov. (Actinistia, Rebellatricidae, fam. nov.), from the Lower Triassic of Western Canada

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Pages 499-511 | Received 29 Mar 2011, Accepted 27 Dec 2011, Published online: 03 May 2012

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Gloria Arratia & Hans-Peter Schultze. (2015) A new fossil actinistian from the Early Jurassic of Chile and its bearing on the phylogeny of Actinistia. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 35:5.
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Hugo Dutel, Marc Herbin & Gaël Clément. (2015) First occurrence of a mawsoniid coelacanth in the Early Jurassic of Europe. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 35:3.
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Francesca F Giammona. (2021) Form and Function of the Caudal Fin Throughout the Phylogeny of Fishes. Integrative and Comparative Biology 61:2, pages 550-572.
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Michał Zatoń, Krzysztof Broda, Martin Qvarnström, Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki & Per Erik Ahlberg. (2017) The first direct evidence of a Late Devonian coelacanth fish feeding on conodont animals. The Science of Nature 104:3-4.
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Michael S. Y. Lee, Kate L. Sanders, Benedict King & Alessandro Palci. (2016) Diversification rates and phenotypic evolution in venomous snakes (Elapidae). Royal Society Open Science 3:1, pages 150277.
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Andrew G. Neuman. (2015) Fishes from the Lower Triassic portion of the Sulphur Mountain Formation in Alberta, Canada: geological context and taxonomic composition. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 52:8, pages 557-568.
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Thomas Fletcher, John Altringham, Jeffrey Peakall, Paul Wignall & Robert Dorrell. (2014) Hydrodynamics of fossil fishes. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 281:1788, pages 20140703.
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Torsten M. Scheyer, Carlo Romano, Jim Jenks & Hugo Bucher. (2014) Early Triassic Marine Biotic Recovery: The Predators' Perspective. PLoS ONE 9:3, pages e88987.
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Luke M. Hauser & David M. Martill. (2013) Evidence for coelacanths in the Late Triassic (Rhaetian) of England. Proceedings of the Geologists' Association 124:6, pages 982-987.
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M.S.S. de Carvalho, V. Gallo & H.R.S. Santos. (2013) New species of coelacanth fish from the Lower Cretaceous (Albian) of the Grajaú Basin, NE Brazil. Cretaceous Research 46, pages 80-89.
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Lionel Cavin, Heinz Furrer & Christian Obrist. (2013) New coelacanth material from the Middle Triassic of eastern Switzerland, and comments on the taxic diversity of actinistans. Swiss Journal of Geosciences 106:2, pages 161-177.
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Andrew J. WendruffMark V.H. Wilson. (2013) New Early Triassic coelacanth in the family Laugiidae (Sarcopterygii: Actinistia) from the Sulphur Mountain Formation near Wapiti Lake, British Columbia, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 50:9, pages 904-910.
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E. L. Sharp & J. A. Clack. (2013) A review of the Carboniferous lungfish genus Ctenodus Agassiz, 1838 from the United Kingdom, with new data from an articulated specimen of Ctenodus interruptus Barkas, 1869 . Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 104:2, pages 169-204.
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Didier Casane & Patrick Laurenti. (2013) Why coelacanths are not ‘living fossils’. BioEssays 35:4, pages 332-338.
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Hugo Dutel, John G. Maisey, David R. Schwimmer, Philippe Janvier, Marc Herbin & Gaël Clément. (2012) The Giant Cretaceous Coelacanth (Actinistia, Sarcopterygii) Megalocoelacanthus dobiei Schwimmer, Stewart & Williams, 1994, and Its Bearing on Latimerioidei Interrelationships. PLoS ONE 7:11, pages e49911.
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