Fenestra Biological morphology - Search results - Wiki Fenestra Biological Morphology
The page "Fenestra+Biological+morphology" does not exist. You can create a draft and submit it for review or request that a redirect be created, but consider checking the search results below to see whether the topic is already covered.
Look up fenestra or fenestration in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. A fenestra (fenestration; pl.: fenestrae or fenestrations) is any small opening or... |
side of the skull. The infratemporal fenestra, also called the lateral temporal fenestra or lower temporal fenestra, is the lower of the two and is exposed... |
An anapsid is an amniote whose skull lacks one or more skull openings (fenestra, or fossae) near the temples. Traditionally, the Anapsida are the most... |
small oval to circular-shaped hole, called maxillary fenestra. Though in front of this fenestra were two small openings, referred to as promaxillary fenestrae... |
anterior margin of the maxillary fenestra. Zhuchengtyrannus also possesses a ventral margin of the antorbital fenestra that lies well above that of the... |
Cenozoic are mammals. Unlike other amniotes, synapsids have a single temporal fenestra, an opening low in the skull roof behind each eye orbit, leaving a bony... |
transverse cloacal slits, an opening in the pelvis known as the thyroid fenestra, the presence of extra ossification centres in the limb bone epiphyses... |
parietal showing a kink to behind at the level of the rear supratemporal fenestra, a typical centrosaurine trait. The squamosal and the jugal bone, by touching... |
upper and lower fenestra, Synapsida means "fused arch" in reference to a single bar at the bottom of the skull closing a single fenestra, and Anapsida means... |
the tuatara has a complete lower temporal bar closing the lower temporal fenestra (an opening of the skull behind the eye socket), caused by the fusion of... |
those characteristics are the closure of the supratemporal fenestra and the post-temporal fenestra, the relative large braincase, tubular or scroll-like palatines... |
openings, the infratemporal fenestra on the side and the supratemporal fenestra on the top of the skull. The infratemporal fenestra was tall, short, and kidney-shaped... |
definitions of the group Archosauria rely on shared morphological characteristics, such as an antorbital fenestra in the skull, serrated teeth, and an upright... |
Paleognaths share similar pelvis anatomy. There is a large, open ilio–ischiatic fenestra in the pelvis. The pubis and ischium are likely to be longer than the ilium... |
posterior edge of the antorbital fenestra, a condition also seen in Stolokrosuchus, in which the antorbital fenestra is almost entirely located within... |
Reptile (section Morphology and physiology) relatives) Synapsida – one low fenestra – pelycosaurs and therapsids (the 'mammal-like reptiles') Euryapsida – one high fenestra (above the postorbital and... |
Mammal (section Biological systems) and dinosaurs (including birds). Synapsids have a single hole (temporal fenestra) low on each side of the skull. Primitive synapsids included the largest... |
skull of Mesosaurus possessing the "Synapsid condition" of one temporal fenestra. The holotype of M. tenuidens, MNHN 1865-77, is nicknamed the "Griqua Mesosaurus"... |
which reduced the weight of the skull. In Deinonychus, the antorbital fenestra, a skull opening between the eye and nostril, was particularly large. Deinonychus... |
small size, the lack of fusion between the nasals and the presence of the fenestra between the prefrontal, frontal, postorbital and lacrimal bones. The generic... |