Neues Jahrbuch fuer Geologie und Palaontologie-Abhandlungen

Papers
(The H4-Index of Neues Jahrbuch fuer Geologie und Palaontologie-Abhandlungen is 6. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-04-01 to 2024-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
New cranial material of Miotragocerus monacensis (Mammalia: Bovidae) from the late Miocene hominid locality Hammerschmiede (Germany)10
Discovery of complemental males in a Pliocene accumulation of Chelonibia testudinaria (Linnaeus, 1758), with some notes on the evolution of androdioecy in turtle barnacles9
The endobiontic serpulids in corals and other reef associated fauna from the Messinian of Algeria8
The higher taxonomic nomenclature of Devonian to Cretaceous ammonoids and Jurassic to Cretaceous ammonites including their authorship and publication7
Zircon U‑Pb age of the Cretaceous Tlayúa Fossil-Lagerstätte in Central Mexico7
Giants of the Pampean plains (Argentina) during Early Pleistocene (Ensenadan). The case of Panochthus (Xenarthra, Glyptodontidae): comparative descriptions7
Redefinition of the family Rhizangiidae (Scleractinia; Cretaceous to Recent) and description of a new genus from the Early Cretaceous of Spain6
Petrography and geochemistry of the Middle–Upper Jurassic Banik section, northernmost Iraq – Implications for palaeoredox, evaporitic and diagenetic conditions6
Asteracanthus (Hybodontiformes: Acrodontidae) remains from the Jurassic of Hungary, with the description of a new species and with remarks on the taxonomy and paleobiology of the genus6
Environmental evolution of the Acholla coast (Gulf of Gabes, Tunisia) during the past 2000 years as inferred from palaeontological and sedimentological proxies6
Revision of Cyclida (Pancrustacea, Multicrustacea), with five new genera6
Inclusions of beetles (Coleoptera) in Baltic amber of the Kaliningrad Amber Museum: an inventory of illusions and reality6
A Karethraichnus boring on a turtle shell bone from the Miocene of Italy is assessed as the attachment scar of a platylepadid symbiont6
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