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  2. Branchial arch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branchial_arch

    In tetrapods, a mostly terrestrial clade evolved from lobe-finned fish, many pharyngeal arch elements are lost, including the gill arches. In amphibians and reptiles , only the oral jaws and a hyoid apparatus remains, and in mammals and birds the hyoid is simplified further to support the tongue and floor of the mouth .

  3. Cambrian chordates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambrian_chordates

    Metaspriggina fossil from the Royal Ontario Museum's collection. Metaspriggina Walcotti is fish-like and measures up to 6 centimetres (2.4 in) in length and 1 centimetre (0.39 in) in breadth. [26] It possesses a notochord along with seven pairs of pharyngeal bars, possibly made of cartilage. The pharyngeal bars were formed of multiple separate ...

  4. Pharyngeal arch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharyngeal_arch

    The first pharyngeal arch, also mandibular arch (corresponding to the first branchial arch of fish), is the first of six pharyngeal arches that develops during the fourth week of development. [10] It is located between the stomodeum and the first pharyngeal groove .

  5. Evidence of common descent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evidence_of_common_descent

    The history of the camel provides an example of how fossil evidence can be used to reconstruct migration and subsequent evolution. The fossil record indicates that the evolution of camelids started in North America (see figure 4e), from which, six million years ago, they migrated across the Bering Strait into Asia and then to Africa, and 3.5 ...

  6. Confuciusornithidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confuciusornithidae

    Confuciusornithidae contains four genera, possessing both shafted and non-shafted (downy) feathers. Some specimens probably referable to this clade represents one of the earliest known fossil evidence of primary feather moulting. [1] They are also noted for their distinctive pair of ribbon-like tail feathers of disputed function.

  7. Pharyngeal slit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharyngeal_slit

    With the placement of hemichordates and echinoderms as a sister group to chordates, a new hypothesis has emerged-suggesting that pharyngeal gill slits were present in the deuterostome ancestor . [11] Intriguingly, extant echinoderms lack pharyngeal structures, but fossil records reveal that ancestral forms of echinoderms had gill-like ...

  8. Confuciusornis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confuciusornis

    C. sanctus specimen, Cincinnati Museum of Natural History and Science; specimens have been distributed worldwide. In November 1993, the Chinese paleontologists Hou Lianhai and Hu Yoaming of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) at Beijing, visited fossil collector Zhang He at his home in Jinzhou, where he showed them a fossil bird specimen that he had bought at ...

  9. Fish jaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_jaw

    The pharyngeal jaws of most fishes are not mobile. The pharyngeal jaws of the moray are highly mobile, perhaps as an adaptation to the constricted nature of the burrows they inhabit which inhibits their ability to swallow as other fishes do by creating a negative pressure in the mouth. Instead, when the moray bites prey, it first bites normally ...