W Scott Persons 4th
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Explore the profile of W Scott Persons 4th including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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Articles
14
Citations
117
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Recent Articles
1.
Xing L, Niu K, Lockley M, Romilio A, Deng K, Persons 4th W
iScience
. 2024 May;
27(5):109598.
PMID: 38799075
The Longxiang tracksite (lower Upper Cretaceous, Shanghang Basin) includes twelve didactyl deinonychosaur tracks that fall into two morphologies, differentiated by both size and form. The smaller tracks (∼11 cm long)...
2.
Xing L, Niu K, Lockley M, Klein H, Romilio A, Persons 4th W, et al.
Sci Bull (Beijing)
. 2023 Jan;
64(16):1136-1139.
PMID: 36659682
No abstract available.
3.
Persons 4th W, Currie P, Erickson G
Anat Rec (Hoboken)
. 2019 Mar;
303(4):656-672.
PMID: 30897281
Here we describe an extremely large and relatively complete (roughly 65%) skeleton of Tyrannosaurus rex (RSM P2523.8). Multiple measurements (including those of the skull, hip, and limbs) show that RSM...
4.
Persons 4th W, Acorn J
Am Nat
. 2017 Jun;
190(1):152-156.
PMID: 28617636
Among the largest and most abundant aquatic predators during much of the early evolution of vertebrates, eurypterids have long been an iconic and intensely studied group of Paleozoic arthropods. We...
5.
Bell P, Campione N, Persons 4th W, Currie P, Larson P, Tanke D, et al.
Biol Lett
. 2017 Jun;
13(6).
PMID: 28592520
Recent evidence for feathers in theropods has led to speculations that the largest tyrannosaurids, including , were extensively feathered. We describe fossil integument from and other tyrannosaurids ( and ),...
6.
Xing L, McKellar R, Xu X, Li G, Bai M, Persons 4th W, et al.
Curr Biol
. 2017 Mar;
27(6):R216-R217.
PMID: 28324735
In his correspondence, Markus Lambertz [1] raises some concerns about the phylogenetic placement and feather development of DIP-V-15103, the amber-entombed tail section that we recently reported [2] as fragmentary remains...
7.
Xing L, McKellar R, Xu X, Li G, Bai M, Persons 4th W, et al.
Curr Biol
. 2016 Dec;
26(24):3352-3360.
PMID: 27939315
In the two decades since the discovery of feathered dinosaurs [1-3], the range of plumage known from non-avialan theropods has expanded significantly, confirming several features predicted by developmentally informed models...
8.
Xing L, Li D, Falkingham P, Lockley M, Benton M, Klein H, et al.
Sci Rep
. 2016 Feb;
6:21138.
PMID: 26888058
For more than 70 years unusual sauropod trackways have played a pivotal role in debates about the swimming ability of sauropods. Most claims that sauropods could swim have been based...
9.
Xing L, Lockley M, Marty D, Zhang J, Wang Y, Klein H, et al.
PLoS One
. 2015 Oct;
10(10):e0141059.
PMID: 26492525
The historically-famous Lotus Fortress site, a deep 1.5-3.0-meter-high, 200-meter-long horizonal notch high up in near-vertical sandstone cliffs comprising the Cretaceous Jiaguan Formation, has been known since the 13th Century as...
10.
Persons 4th W, Funston G, Currie P, Norell M
Sci Rep
. 2015 Apr;
5:9472.
PMID: 25824625
The hypothesis that oviraptorosaurs used tail-feather displays in courtship behavior previously predicted that oviraptorosaurs would be found to display sexually dimorphic caudal osteology. MPC-D 100/1002 and MPC-D 100/1127 are two...