LAWRENCE M. WITMER

Cranial Kinesis in Dinosaurs: Intracranial Joints, Protractor Muscles, and Their Significance for Cranial Evolution and Function in Diapsids (2008)

Casey M. Holliday, Lawrence M. Witmer

Different forms of intracranial mobility, including streptostyly, pleurokinesis, and prokinesis, have been postulated for many dinosaurs. The basis for inferring kinesis typically has included the...

PERSPECTIVES Merging Fossil Specimens with (2007)

Stephen M. Gatesy, Lawrence M. Witmer, Ramesh Raskar, L. Miguel Encarnação

paleontology—the use of augmented reality technologies to clothe fossil skeletons with soft tissues and skin— will let paleontologists bring their bare-bones specimens to life.

A New Specimen of Pinacosaurus grangeri (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia: Ontogeny and Phylogeny of Ankylosaurs (2003)

ROBERT V. HILL, LAWRENCE M. WITMER, MARK A. NORELL

Here we report the occurrence of a juvenile ankylosaur from the Upper Cretaceous locality Ukhaa Tolgod in southern Mongolia. The locality is well known for its exquisitely preserved theropods,...

The cranial air sac system of mesozoic birds /--by Lawrence M. Witmer. (1987)

Witmer, Lawrence M.

Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, Systematics and Ecology, 1987.

Structural Extremes in a Cretaceous Dinosaur

Sereno, Paul C., Wilson, Jeffrey A., Witmer, Lawrence M., Whitlock, John A., Maga, Abdoulaye, Ide, Oumarou, ...

Fossils of the Early Cretaceous dinosaur, Nigersaurus taqueti, document for the first time the cranial anatomy of a rebbachisaurid sauropod. Its extreme adaptations for herbivory at ground-level...