D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
Full reference
D. T. Ksepka, D. J. Field, T. A. Heath, W. Pett, D. B. Thomas, S. Giovanardi, and A. J. D. Tennyson. 2023. Largest-known fossil penguin provides insight into the early evolution of sphenisciform body size and flipper anatomy. Journal of Paleontology 97(2):434-453 [T. Park/T. Park/P. Mannion]
Metadata
ID number: | 84171 |
Created: | 2023-03-22 07:19:58 |
Modified: | 2023-05-04 12:22:41 |
Publication type: | journal article |
Taxonomy: | stated with evidence |
Language: | English |
DOI: | 10.1017/jpa.2022.88 |
Taxonomic names (3)
Taxonomic opinions (4) - view classification
'Kumimanu fordycei belongs to Kumimanu' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
'Kumimanu belongs to Sphenisciformes' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
'Petradyptes stonehousei belongs to Petradyptes' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
'Petradyptes belongs to Sphenisciformes' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
'Kumimanu belongs to Sphenisciformes' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
'Petradyptes stonehousei belongs to Petradyptes' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023
'Petradyptes belongs to Sphenisciformes' according to D. T. Ksepka et al. 2023