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1. Were jellyfish stranded on a shoreline sand ca 850 million years ago in the Amadeus Basin of central Australia?

2. Sedimentological and stratigraphically controlled preservation styles and distribution of fossil cetaceans from a new Early Miocene fossiliferous locality, Patagonia, Argentina.

3. Deep‐water first occurrences of Ediacara biota prior to the Shuram carbon isotope excursion in the Wernecke Mountains, Yukon, Canada.

4. Macro- and micromorphology of Carex pauciflora-type fossils (Cyperaceae) from Europe and Siberia reveals unexpected affinity to Carex sect. Cyperoideae.

5. Cambrian integrative stratigraphy, biotas, and paleogeographical evolution of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau and its surrounding areas.

6. Cryogenian and Ediacaran integrative stratigraphy, biotas, and paleogeographical evolution of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau and its surrounding areas.

7. Ordovician integrative stratigraphy, biotas, and paleogeographical evolution of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau and its surrounding areas.

8. Carboniferous integrative stratigraphy, biotas, and paleogeographical evolution of the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau and its surrounding areas.

9. New Benthic Fossils from the Late Ediacaran Strata of Southwestern China.

10. Metabarcoding reveals unique microbial mat communities and evidence of biogeographic influence in low‐oxygen, high‐sulfur sinkholes and springs.

11. The evolution of cnidarian stinging cells supports a Precambrian radiation of animal predators.

12. A Bayesian astrochronology for the Cambrian first occurrence of trilobites in West Gondwana (Morocco).

13. Decline and fall of the Ediacarans: late‐Neoproterozoic extinctions and the rise of the modern biosphere.

14. First Cenozoic Macrofossil Record of Polypodiaceae from India and Its Biogeographic Implications.

15. Ecological novelty at the start of the Cambrian and Ordovician radiations of echinoderms.

16. The Connection between the Early Cambrian Basins of Western Mongolia and Southern France Based on Malacological Data.

17. Phosphorus content in modern-day Cnidarians.

18. New taphonomic and sedimentological insights into the preservation of high-relief Ediacaran fossils at Upper Island Cove, Newfoundland.

19. Reappraisal of the Neoproterozoic to middle Paleozoic fossils of North Korea and its tectonic implication.

20. Sedimentary evolution and sequence stratigraphy of Ediacaran high‐grade phosphorite–dolomite–shale successions of the Bocaina Formation (Corumbá Group), Central Brazil: Implications for the Neoproterozoic phosphogenic event.

21. New insights into the fossil record of the turtle genus Chelus Duméril, 1806 including new specimens with information on cervicals and limb bones.

22. Nimbia: the discoid organisms from Ediacaran Sonia Sandstone of Jodhpur Group, Marwar Supergroup, western India.

23. Macroscopic fossils from the Chuanlinggou Formation of North China: evidence for an earlier origin of multicellular algae in the late Palaeoproterozoic.

24. Fossilisation processes and our reading of animal antiquity.

25. A FEAST FOR the (GEOLOGIC) AGES.

26. The lower Cambrian Cranbrook Lagerstätte of British Columbia.

27. U–Pb zircon–rutile dating of the Llangynog Inlier, Wales: constraints on an Ediacaran shallow-marine fossil assemblage from East Avalonia.

28. A new method for examining the co-occurrence network of fossil assemblages.

29. The Oldest Trace Fossils in Association with an Ediacara-Type Biota in the Upper Vendian of the South Urals.

30. A Class Project for Investigating Possible Future Local Effects of Global Climate Change through Student Analysis of Fossil Faunas.

31. New Ediacaran biota from the oldest Nama Group, Namibia (Tsaus Mountains), and re-definition of the Nama Assemblage.

32. A large enigmatic fossil from the early Cambrian (Series 2, Stage 3) Heatherdale Shale of South Australia.

33. Redox Conditions of the Late Ediacaran Ocean on the Southern Margin of the North China Craton.

34. Heterogeneous sulfide reoxidation buffered oxygen release in the Ediacaran Shuram ocean.

35. Widespread seafloor anoxia during generation of the Ediacaran Shuram carbon isotope excursion.

36. Environmental and temporal patterns in bioturbation in the Cambrian–Ordovician of Western Newfoundland.

37. A macroscopic free-swimming medusa from the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale.

38. A Great late Ediacaran ice age.

39. Sulphate-reducing bacteria-mediated pyrite formation in the Dachang Tongkeng tin polymetallic deposit, Guangxi, China.

40. Palaeobiology and taphonomy of the rangeomorph Culmofrons plumosa.

41. Exceptional lower Cambrian fossils from a long‐lost locality in Vermont, USA.

42. The biogeography of extant lungfishes traces the breakup of Gondwana.

43. The role of iron in the formation of Ediacaran 'death masks'.

44. Ediacaran–Cambrian bioturbation did not extensively oxygenate sediments in shallow marine ecosystems.

45. Landscape-level variability and insect herbivore outbreak captured within modern forests provides a framework for interpreting the fossil record.

46. Metazoan zooplankton in the Bay of Biscay: 16 years of individual sizes and abundances from the ZooScan and ZooCAM imaging systems.

47. Deep origin of the long root tuft: the oldest stalk-bearing sponge from the Cambrian Stage 3 black shale of South China.

48. Salinity variation and hydrographic dynamics in the early Cambrian Nanhua Basin (South China).

49. Early Permian zircon ages from the P. confluens and P. pseudoreticulata spore-pollen zones in the southern Bonaparte and Canning basins, northwestern Australia.

50. Praecarbo strigoniensis, a new genus and species of Cormorants (Phalacrocoracinae) from the Late Oligocene of Hungary.

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