Late Carboniferous paleoichnology reveals the oldest full-body impression of a flying insect
Richard J. Knecht(Harvard University), Jacob S. Benner(Tufts University), Michael S. Engel(Natural History Museum)
Cited by 34
Related Papers
Surculichnus bifurcauda n. igen., n. isp., a trace fossil from Late Pleistocene glaciolacustrine varves of the Connecticut River Valley, USA, attributed to notostracan crustaceans based on neoichnological experimentation
|Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology|2008|26
Timing of post-glacial reinhabitation and ecological development of two New England, USA, drainages based on trace fossil evidence
|Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology|2008|23
Endophytic ancestors of modern leaf miners may have evolved in the Late Carboniferous
|New Phytologist|2023|12
The largest Palaeozoic whip scorpion and the smallest (Arachnida: Uropygi: Thelyphonida); a new species and a new ichnospecies from the Carboniferous of New England, USA
|Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society|2023|7
Early Pennsylvanian Lagerstätte reveals a diverse ecosystem on a subhumid, alluvial fan
|Nature Communications|2024|7