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I.—Restoration of some European Dinosaurs, with Suggestions as to their Place among the Reptilia1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

O. C. Marsh
Affiliation:
Yale College, New Heaven, U.S.

Extract

For several years I have been engaged in investigating the Dinosaurs of North America, where these extinct reptiles were very abundant during the whole of Mesozoic time. The results of my study have been published from time to time, and I have already had the honour of presenting some of these to the British Association. In carrying out this investigation so as to include the whole group of Dinosaurs, wherever found, and bringing all under one system of classification, it has been necessary for me to study the remains discovered in Europe, and I have made several visits to this country for that purpose.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1896

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Footnotes

1

Abstract of paper read before Section C, British Association for the Advancement of Science, Ipswich, September 14th, 1895.

References

page 3 note 1 The remains of the embryo within the skeleton of Compsognathus, first detected by me in 1881, while examining the type specimen, is not represented in the present restoration. This unique fossil affords the only known evidence that Dinosaurs were viviparous.

page 6 note 1 Philosophical Transactions, 1882.

page 8 note 1 Bulletin Royal Museum of Belgium, 1882–1888.

page 8 note 2 A copy of this Chart will appear in the next Number of this Magazine.—Edit. Geol. Mag.