安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Bothriolepis - Wikipedia
Bothriolepis (from Greek: βόθρος bóthros, 'trench' and Greek: λεπίς lepis 'scale') was a widespread, abundant and diverse genus of antiarch placoderms that lived during the Middle to Late Devonian period of the Paleozoic Era
- Bothriolepis | Devonian fish, armored fish, jawless fish | Britannica
Bothriolepis, genus of extinct fishes of the order Antiarcha, class Placodermi, characteristic of the Middle and Late Devonian (from about 387 million to 360 million years ago) The front end of Bothriolepis was very heavily encased in bony armour
- Bothriolepis - The Prehistoric Nature Wiki
Bothriolepis was a genus of widespread antiarch placoderm from the Devonian The animal was found all across the globe and inhabited both freshwater and saltwater
- lt;i gt;Bothriolepis lt; i gt; sp. — Geoscience Research Institute
Bothriolepis was an armored fish found in Devonian sediments throughout much of the world The head and front portion of the body were covered with bony plates, but the tail end was covered with bare skin
- Bothriolepis
Bothriolepis is an extinct genus of antiarch placoderm, a diverse and abundant group of armored jawed fishes that thrived during the Middle to Late Devonian period of the Paleozoic Era, approximately 393 to 358 million years ago
- Age is just a number: Examining the preservation of cells and soft . . .
Recent microscopy and proteomic studies demonstrate fossil bones can preserve remarkable palimpsests of cellular and soft tissue evolution, yet it remains unclear if there are temporal limits to such preservation
- Bothriolepis@Paleozoic Aquarium
Bothriolepis is an extinct genus of antiarchs placoderms lived during the Late Devonian 1), 4) The large number of specimens have been found in all over the world, so Bothriolepis would be among the best known placoderms 1), 4), 6)
- Bothriolepis - Reference. org
Most species of Bothriolepis were characterized as relatively small, benthic, freshwater detritivores (organisms that obtain nutrients by consuming decomposing plant animal material), averaging around 30 centimetres (12 in) in length
|
|
|