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John D. Scanlon
John D. Scanlon
No current affiliation
Verified email at phoenixenv.com.au
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Snake phylogeny based on osteology, soft anatomy and ecology
MSY Lee, JD Scanlon
Biological Reviews 77 (3), 333-401, 2002
2442002
The Pleistocene serpent Wonambi and the early evolution of snakes
JD Scanlon, MSY Lee
Nature 403 (6768), 416-420, 2000
1492000
Current status of species-level representation in faunas from selected fossil localities in the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, northwestern Queensland
M Archer, A DERRICK, M Bassarova, RMD BECK, K BLACK, EB WALTER, ...
Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology 30 (S1), 1-17, 2006
1132006
Phylogeny of snakes (Serpentes): combining morphological and molecular data in likelihood, Bayesian and parsimony analyses
MSY Lee, AF Hugall, R Lawson, JD Scanlon
Systematics and Biodiversity 5 (4), 371-389, 2007
1002007
Skull of the large non-macrostomatan snake Yurlunggur from the Australian Oligo-Miocene
JD Scanlon
Nature 439 (7078), 839-842, 2006
882006
Phylogeny of Australasian venomous snakes (Colubroidea, Elapidae, Hydrophiinae) based on phenotypic and molecular evidence
JD Scanlon, MSY Lee
Zoologica Scripta 33 (4), 335-366, 2004
812004
A late cretaceous (Maastrichtian) snake assemblage from the Maevarano formation, Mahajanga basin, Madagascar
TC Laduke, DW Krause, JD Scanlon, NJ Kley
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 (1), 109-138, 2010
762010
Mid-Tertiary elapid snakes (Squamata, Colubroidea) from Riversleigh, northern Australia: early steps in a continent-wide adaptive radiation
JD Scanlon, MSY Lee, M Archer
Geobios 36 (5), 573-601, 2003
672003
A second primitive marine snake: Pachyophis woodwardi from the Cretaceous of Bosnia-Herzegovina
MSY Lee, MW Caldwell, JD Scanlon
Journal of Zoology 248 (4), 509-520, 1999
671999
An early Eocene crocodilian from Murgon, southeastern Queensland
PMA Willis, RE Molnar, JD Scanlon
Kaupia 3, 27-33, 1993
541993
Nanowana gen. nov., small madtsoiid snakes from the Miocene of Riversleigh: sympatric species with divergently specialised dentition
JD Scanlon
MEMOIRS-QUEENSLAND MUSEUM 41, 393-412, 1997
511997
Australia’s oldest known snakes: Patagoniophis, Alamitophis, and cf. Madtsoia (Squamata: Madtsoiidae) from the Eocene of Queensland
JD Scanlon
Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 51 (1), 215-235, 2005
502005
Molecular phylogeny of viviparous Australian elapid snakes: affinities of Echiopsis atriceps (Storr, 1980) and Drysdalia coronata (Schlegel, 1837), with description of a new genus
JS Keogh, IAW Scott, JD Scanlon
Journal of Zoology 252 (3), 317-326, 2000
502000
A new large madtsoiid snake from the Miocene of the Northern Territory
JD Scanlon
Beagle: Records of the Museums and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory …, 1992
501992
Dentition and diet in snakes: adaptations to oophagy in the Australian elapid genus Simoselaps
JD Scanlon, R Shine
Journal of Zoology 216 (3), 519-528, 1988
461988
Cranial morphology of the Plio-Pleistocene giant madtsoiid snake Wonambi naracoortensis
JD Scanlon
Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 50 (1), 139, 2005
442005
Madtsoiid snakes from the Eocene Tingamarra Fauna of eastern Queensland
JD Scanlon
Kaupia 3, 3-8, 1993
431993
The palaeoecology of the primitive snake Pachyrhachis
JD Scanlon, MSY Lee, MW Caldwell, R Shine
Historical Biology 13 (2-3), 127-152, 1999
401999
Varanoid-like dentition in primitive snakes (Madtsoiidae)
JD Scanlon, MSY Lee
Journal of Herpetology, 100-106, 2002
392002
A dolichosaurid lizard from the latest Albian (mid-Cretaceous) Winton Formation, Queensland, Australia
JD Scanlon, SA Hocknull
Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science (Fort Hays Studies Special …, 2008
352008
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