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    FIGURE 1 in Discovery of the most ancient member of family Tanyderidae (Diptera) from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of England

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    FIGURE 1. Wing venation of Nannotanyderus krzeminskii, holotype; (Toarcian of Grimmen); scale 0.5 mm.Published as part of Skibińska, Kornelia, Krzemiński, Wiesław & Coram, Robert A., 2014, Discovery of the most ancient member of family Tanyderidae (Diptera) from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of England, pp. 125-130 in Zootaxa 3857 (1) on page 126, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3857.1.6, http://zenodo.org/record/22742

    Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation

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    AUSTEN, PETER A., WANG, BO, ROSS, ANDREW J., CORAM, ROBERT A. (2022): Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation. Palaeoentomology 5 (3): 195-217, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.1, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.

    FIGURE 3 in Discovery of the most ancient member of family Tanyderidae (Diptera) from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of England

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    FIGURE 3. Photography of the wing venation of Nannotanyderus oliviae sp. nov.; paratype Scales 0.5 mm.Published as part of Skibińska, Kornelia, Krzemiński, Wiesław & Coram, Robert A., 2014, Discovery of the most ancient member of family Tanyderidae (Diptera) from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of England, pp. 125-130 in Zootaxa 3857 (1) on page 127, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3857.1.6, http://zenodo.org/record/22742

    FIGURE 1 in Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation

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    FIGURE 1. Ed Jarzembowski talking at the 7th Fossils X3 conference in Edinburgh, UK, 28 April 2016. Photo: Chung-Kun Shih.Published as part of AUSTEN, PETER A., WANG, BO, ROSS, ANDREW J. & CORAM, ROBERT A., 2022, Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation, pp. 195-217 in Palaeoentomology 5 (3) on page 195, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/682075

    FIGURE 2 in Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation

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    FIGURE 2. Ed Jarzembowski at the University of Reading for the awards ceremony of his PhD, 1987.Published as part of AUSTEN, PETER A., WANG, BO, ROSS, ANDREW J. & CORAM, ROBERT A., 2022, Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation, pp. 195-217 in Palaeoentomology 5 (3) on page 196, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/682075

    Nannotanyderus Ansorge 1994

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    Genus <i>Nannotanyderus</i> Ansorge, 1994 <p> <i>Nannotanyderus</i> comprises five species in addition to the one described herein: <i>N. krzeminskii</i> Ansorge, 1994 from the Toarcian of Grimmen and Dobbertin, Germany; <i>N. grimmenensis</i> Ansorge & Krzemiński, 2002 from the Toarcian of Grimmen;? <i>N. incertus</i> Lukashevich, 2011 from the Upper Jurassic of Shar-Teg, Mongolia (this is based on an incomplete wing assigned to the genus with some reservation by the original author); <i>N. kubekovensis</i> Skibińska & Krzemiński, 2013 from the Upper Jurassic of Karatau, Kazakhstan (in Skibińska & Krzemiński, 2013 the specimen locality was incorrectly stated as Kubekovo); and <i>N. ansorgei</i> Krzemiński <i>et al</i>., 2013 from Lower Cretaceous Lebanese amber. Members of this genus are distinguished by their tiny size, with a wing length of 2–4 mm. Moreover vein Sc does not extend beyond the mid–point of the wing and vein R2 is several times shorter than R2+3.</p> <p> <b>Type species.</b> <i>Nannotanyderus krzeminskii</i> Ansorge, 1994; Lower Jurassic (Toarcian), Germany (Fig. 1).</p>Published as part of <i>Skibińska, Kornelia, Krzemiński, Wiesław & Coram, Robert A., 2014, Discovery of the most ancient member of family Tanyderidae (Diptera) from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of England, pp. 125-130 in Zootaxa 3857 (1)</i> on page 126, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3857.1.6, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/227424">http://zenodo.org/record/227424</a&gt

    FIGURE 3. A in Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation

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    FIGURE 3. A, Ed Jarzembowski in the laboratory at Nanjing, 2012. B, Ed 'feeding' the dinosaur in Nanjing outside NIGPAS (CAS) public museum, 12 June 2012. C, Ed Jarzembowski receiving the 'Jiangsu Friendship Award', 18 September 2015. D, Ed Jarzembowski with Sir David Attenborough at the opening of the West Wing in Maidstone Museum, 2 August 2006.Published as part of AUSTEN, PETER A., WANG, BO, ROSS, ANDREW J. & CORAM, ROBERT A., 2022, Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation, pp. 195-217 in Palaeoentomology 5 (3) on page 198, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/682075

    FIGURE 5. A in Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation

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    FIGURE 5. A, Ed studying new finds at Clockhouse Brickworks, Surrey, 22 July 2006. B, Ed explaining the significance of the discarded large calcareous siltstones to a Geologists' Association field meeting at Langhurstwood Quarry, West Sussex, 23 July 2011. C, Ed at the discovery of amber at Smokejacks Brickworks, Surrey, the first to be recovered from the Weald Clay, 12 April 2015. D, Ed excavating for fossil insects at Smokejacks Brickworks, Surrey, 16 September 2017.Published as part of AUSTEN, PETER A., WANG, BO, ROSS, ANDREW J. & CORAM, ROBERT A., 2022, Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation, pp. 195-217 in Palaeoentomology 5 (3) on page 201, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/682075

    FIGURE 4. A in Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation

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    FIGURE 4. A, Ed pictured at Maidstone Museum with a giant ammonite for the Kent Messenger newspaper, 1996. B, Ed Jarzembowski working with Bo Wang examining the Badaowan Formation (Lower Jurassic), northwestern China, 7 September 2016. C, Ed and Biddy Jarzembowski after emerging from deep underground in the Tower Colliery, the last deep mine in Wales, 31 August 1997. D, Writhlington Geological Nature Reserve, 1994, when 350 volunteers turned up, 16 April 1994. Photo: Colin Prosser, Natural England.Published as part of AUSTEN, PETER A., WANG, BO, ROSS, ANDREW J. & CORAM, ROBERT A., 2022, Edmund Jarzembowski at 70: An appreciation, pp. 195-217 in Palaeoentomology 5 (3) on page 199, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.5.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/682075

    Locustopsinae Handlirsch 1906

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    Subfamily Locustopsinae Handlirsch, 1906 Remarks. In 2006, Cretaceous representatives of Locustopsinae were tentatively included in four genera having different positions of the MA2 base and different numbers of MP+CuA1 branches in the tegmina (Gorochov et al., 2006): Locustopsis Handlirsch, 1906 with the MA2 base located before the MA1 bifurcation and with MP+CuA1 having two branches; Zeunerella Sharov, 1968 with MA2 located on 2MA1 behind the MA1 bifurcation and with the same structure of MP+CuA1; Mesolocustopsis Hong & Wang, 1990 with MA as in Locustopsis but with one branch of MP+CuA1; Zessinia Martins-Neto, 1990 with MA as in Zeunerella but with MP+CuA1 as in Mesolocustopsis. The Cretaceous genera Cratozeunerella Martins-Neto, 1998 and Cratolocustopsis Martins-Neto, 1998 were also tentatively synonymized with Zeunerella and Mesolocustopsis, respectively. The tentative genera Locustopsis, Zeunerella and Mesolocustopsis are also known in the Jurassic, but the two latter genera are represented in these deposits by only one and two species, respectively (Gorochov et al., 2006); Locustopsis, on the contrary, has numerous species of the Jurassic age. Moreover, the structure of its tegminal MA is clearly more primitive, characteristic of all the Triassic representatives of Locustopsidae. However, the other Jurassic locustopsines have the same structure of this vein (as in Locustopsis) but are attributed to a few exclusively Jurassic genera: Gomphocerites Heer, 1852 (Lower Jurassic); Parapleurites Brauer, Redtenbacher & Ganglbauer, 1889 (Lower or Middle Jurassic); Phaneropterites Handlirsch, 1906 (Upper Jurassic); Conocephalella Strand, 1928 (Upper Jurassic); Brodiana Zeuner, 1942 (Lower Jurassic); Schwinzia Zessin, 1983 (Lower Jurassic); Plesioschwinzia Zessin, 1988 (Lower Jurassic); Orichalcum Whalley, 1985 (Lower Jurassic). Brodiana and Orichalcum are most probably synonyms of Locustopsis; Gomphocerites, Phaneropterites and Conocephalella are insufficiently understood; but the rest of the Jurassic genera are more or less suitable for determination, and their tentative diagnostic characters are listed below (in the discussion of Plesioschwinzia).Published as part of GOROCHOV, ANDREI V. & CORAM, ROBERT A., 2023, New and little known taxa of the order Orthoptera (Insecta) from the Upper Triassic and Lower Jurassic of England, pp. 198-204 in Palaeoentomology 6 (2) on page 200, DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.6.2.11, http://zenodo.org/record/792888
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