Aleksandr Sergeevich Rautian

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Aleksandr Sergeevich Rautian (born 22 March 1949) is a Russian paleontologist working at the Paleontological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, Russia. [1]

He has named several species including Parvicursor remotus and Praeornis sharovi . [2] [3]

Tributes

The gliding neodiapsid reptile genus and species name Rautiania alexandri Bulanov & Sennikov, 2006 is a tribute to Aleksandr Sergeevich Rautian. [4]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aleksandr Grigorevich Sharov</span>

Aleksandr Grigorevich Sharov was a Soviet palaeoentomologist, paleontologist and expert on Pterosauria. He graduated from Moscow State University. In 1951 he defended Candidate of Science dissertation on the embryology of Apterygota. Since 1951 he worked at the Paleontological Institute in Moscow, where in 1966 he defended dissertation of Doctor of Science. His major contribution to the phylogeny of Arthropods was published in 1966. He worked during the 1960s and 1970s on the Karatau rocks and discovered many of the fossils, of which some have been named after him, as in the case of the Karatausuchus sharovi, and Sharovipteryx. He also discovered and described the specimen Sordes pilosus in 1971 and Longisquama insignis.

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Glaurung is an extinct genus of weigeltisaurid reptile from the Upper Permian of Germany. The only known species is Glaurung schneideri. Originally considered a specimen of Coelurosauravus, a later study named it as a new genus after noting that it had several unique characteristics relative to other weigeltisaurids. These characteristics included a low skull, small eyes, smooth parietal and squamosal bones, and spiny jugal bones.

<i>Parasaurus</i> Extinct genus of reptiles

Parasaurus is a genus of pareiasaur known from fossils collected in the Kupferschiefer in Germany, dating to the Late Permian (Wuchiapingian). The type species, Parasaurus geinitzi, described by Hermann von Meyer in 1857, was the first pareiasaur ever described. The seven known specimens were redescribed in 2008.

References

  1. "ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS". www.degruyter.com. Retrieved 23 August 2024.
  2. Karhu, A.A. and Rautian, A.S. (1996). "A new family of Maniraptora (Dinosauria: Saurischia) from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia". Paleontological JournalRussian Academy of Sciences 30(5): 583-592.
  3. Rautian, A. S. (1978). "A unique bird feather from Jurassic lake deposits in the Karatau." Paleontological Journal, 4: 520-528.
  4. Bulanov, V.V.; Sennikov, A.G. (October 2006). "The first gliding reptiles from the upper Permian of Russia". Paleontological Journal. 40 (supp5): S567–S570. doi:10.1134/S0031030106110037. ISSN   1555-6174. S2CID   84310001.