Examples of using Partial skeleton in English and their translations into Spanish
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Only a partial skeleton has been found.
Only one species the type, Pisanosaurus mertii, is known,based on a single partial skeleton.
A second partial skeleton belongs to a smaller individual.
Cranibrevis, named a skull and partial skeleton(GSC-now NMC-8705) L.
It was named from a partial skeleton found in the?Barremian-age Lower Cretaceous Lakota Formation of Custer County, South Dakota.
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The paratypes were an ulna,a metatarsal and a second partial skeleton consisting of vertebrae and limb elements.
A second partial skeleton lacking the skull was referred to Notocolossus: specimen UNCUYO-LD 302 representing a smaller individual.
It is based on a tibia, with an associated partial skeleton that may belong to the same individual.
It consists of a partial skeleton including a series of three middle tail vertebrae(subsequently considered to be vertebrae from the front of the tail), three isolated chevrons, three isolated neural spines, and a right ischium.
Naashoibitosaurus, based as it is on a single partial skeleton(NMMNH P-16106), is not well known in terms of anatomy.
It consists of one partial skeleton, the holotype USNM 2364, which includes a 76 centimetre long ulna, a scapula, a partial radius, and some metacarpals discovered in August 1859 by John Strong Newberry.
It is known from holotype BNM 14524, a single disarticulated partial skeleton including an almost complete skull, found in August 2005.
A rib fragment from the partial skeleton of a Neanderthal infant found in the Mezmaiskaya cave in the northwestern foothills of the Caucasus Mountains was radiocarbon-dated in 1999 to 29,195±965 B.P., and therefore belonging to the latest lived Neanderthals.
Apsisaurus witteri is known from the holotype MCZ 1474, a three-dimensionally preserved partial skeleton including an incomplete skull and mandibles.
Are inspired by a partial skeleton called pelvis, and in this case is human.
Apart from its holotype C. russelli is known from its paratype CMN 8803, a skull frill; CMN 41933, a rear skull frill; RTMP 81.19.175, the right side of a skull andCMN 2280, a partial skeleton with skull found by the Sternbergs in 1914.
It is known from a skull and partial skeleton found in early Cenomanian-age rocks from Normandy, France.
A second specimen, sometimes assigned to its own genus and species as Raeticodactylus filisurensis,consists of a single disarticulated partial skeleton including an almost complete skull.
It is known from a mostly complete skull and partial skeleton of a juvenile individual, with a bony crest on the forehead.
Some experts have suggested that a partial skeleton, known only by its catalogue number of STS 14, which was discovered in the same year, in the same geological deposit and in proximity to Mrs. Ples, may belong to this skull.
Saltopus elginensis is known only from a single partial skeleton lacking the skull, but including parts of the vertebral column, the forelimbs, the pelvis and the hindlimbs.
The genus is based on one partial skeleton, holotype IVPP 12579, which consists of a series of 41 caudal vertebrae and an incomplete left hindlimb.
The genus is based on holotype SMNS 56342, a crushed partial skeleton on a slab, found in an abandoned mine near Ankerschlag in Tyrol, in the Norian Seefelder Beds.
The species was initially described from a partial skeleton found by grazier Doug Langdon in 1963 at Rosebery Downs Station beside Thomson River near Muttaburra, in the Australian state of Queensland, which also provides the creature's generic name.
They include specimens YPM 1884: the rear half of a skeleton; AMNH 834: a partial skeleton lacking the skull from the Bone Cabin Quarry; and CM 1949: a rear half of a skeleton dug up in 1905 by William H. Utterback.
It is known solely from the holotype, a partial skeleton found in close association that includes a postorbital, teeth, the atlas, a rear cervical vertebra, an incomplete dorsal vertebra, a rear caudal centrum, dorsal ribs, a coracoid, five metacarpals and fragments of a humerus, radius and ulna.
The type specimenof Daspletosaurus torosus(CMN 8506) is a partial skeleton including the skull, the shoulder, a forelimb, the pelvis, a femur and all of the vertebrae from the neck, torso and hip, as well as the first eleven tail vertebrae.
The holotype, known as MOZ-Pv 6459 consists of a partial skeleton with a nearly complete skull(the post-cranial material of which is still unprepared), six cervical vertebrae, fifteen dorsal vertebrae, a sacrum with a partial ilium and an apparently complete pubis, nine caudal vertebrae, part of a scapula, ribs, with the addition of unidentifiable fragments.
It is known solely from its holotype, a closely associated partial skeleton including a complete tooth with root, a fragment of cervical neural arch, an anterior chevron, and an almost complete right pectoral girdle and forelimb.
Sternberg, in the same paper as T. cranibrevis,named a skull and partial skeleton(GSC-8705, now NMC-8705) L. magnicristatum(corrected in 1937 to magnicristatus), and a smaller skull(GSC-8705, now NMC-8703) L. clavinitialis, with a less prominent crest and reduced spine pointing from the back.