Dirk Knaust
0000-0002-1698-2489
48 papers found
Refreshing results…
Burrowed matrix powering dual porosity systems – A case study from the Maastrichtian chalk of the Gullfaks Field, Norwegian North Sea
Exceptionally preserved soft-bodied assemblage in Ordovician carbonates of Anticosti Island, eastern Canada
Sulcolithos variabilis igen. et isp. nov.: grooves on firm and hard bedding surfaces
The Fish Trail Undichna quadrisulcata isp. nov. from the Eocene of Spitsbergen
The enigmatic trace fossil Tisoa de Serres, 1840
Skolithos linearis Haldeman, 1840 at its early Cambrian type locality, Chickies Rock, Pennsylvania: Analysis and designation of a neotype
Teichichnus zigzag Frey and Bromley, 1985: a probable echiuran or holothurian burrow from the Jurassic offshore Norway
The fish swimming trace Undichna unisulca from the Silurian of Sweden: probably the oldest vertebrate locomotion trace fossil
The ichnogenus Teichichnus Seilacher, 1955
The South Viking Graben: Overview of upper jurassic rift geometry, biostratigraphy, and extent of brae play submarine fan systems
The gudrun field: Gravity-flow deposition during rifting and inversion
Corrigendum to “ Asteriacites von Schlotheim, 1820 – the oldest valid ichnogenus name – and other asterozoan-produced trace fossils” [Earth Sci. Rev. 157 (2016) 111–120]
Rediscovery of type material of the bioerosional trace fossil Talpina von Hagenow, 1840 and its ichnotaxonomic implications
Complex In-Substrate Dinosaur (Sauropoda, Ornithopoda) Foot Pathways Revealed by Deep Natural Track Casts from the Lower Cretaceous Xiagou and Zhonggou Formations, Gansu Province, China
Asteriacites von Schlotheim, 1820 – the oldest valid ichnogenus name – and other asterozoan-produced trace fossils
Palaeoenvironmental and ecological interpretation of the trace fossil Rhizocorallium based on contained iron framoboids (Upper Devonian, South China)
The Probable Isopod BurrowSinusichnus seilacheriisp. n. from the Middle Triassic of Germany: An Example of Behavioral Convergence
Tubichnus angulatus -A Complex Burrow System from Erratic Boulders of Early Cambrian Age, Northeast Germany and South Sweden
Siphonichnidae (new ichnofamily) attributed to the burrowing activity of bivalves: Ichnotaxonomy, behaviour and palaeoenvironmental implications
In defence of an iconic ichnogenus – Oichnus Bromley, 1981
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