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List of works by Mark V. H. Wilson

A New Late Cretaceous Macrosemiid Fish (Neopterygii, Halecostomi) from Morocco, with Temporal and Geographical Range Extensions for the Family

scientific article published in March 2009

A fork-tailed coelacanth,Rebellatrix divaricerca, gen. et sp. nov. (Actinistia, Rebellatricidae, fam. nov.), from the Lower Triassic of Western Canada

article

A middle Cenomanian euselachian assemblage from the Dunvegan Formation of northwestern Alberta

scholarly article

Amia cf. pattersoni from the Paleocene Paskapoo Formation of Alberta

scientific article

Anatomy of the early Devonian acanthodianBrochoadmones milesibased on nearly complete body fossils, with comments on the evolution and development of paired fins

article

Buccopharyngo-branchial denticles ofPhlebolepis elegansPander (Thelodonti, Agnatha)

Centrum growth patterns provide evidence for two small taxa of Hiodontidae in the Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation

article

Description of a new Eocene osteoglossid fish and additional information on †Singida jacksonoides Greenwood and Patterson, 1967 (Osteoglossomorpha), with an assessment of their phylogenetic relationships

scholarly article by ALISON M. MURRAY & Mark V. H. Wilson published June 2005 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society

Fishes of the World (5th edition)

book published in 2016

Fossil juvenile Cyathaspididae (Heterostraci) reveal rapid cyclomorial development of the dermal skeleton

Microstratigraphic study of meristic variation in an Eocene fish from a 10 000-year varved interval at Horsefly, British Columbia

scholarly article

New species of Silurian acanthodians from the Mackenzie Mountains, Canada

article

New species of the acanthodian genusTetanopsyrusfrom northern Canada, and comments on related taxa

scientific article published on 14 December 2001

Reconstruction of ancient lake environments using both autochthonous and allochthonous fossils

scientific article

The Furcacaudiformes: a new order of jawless vertebrates with thelodont scales, based on articulated Silurian and Devonian fossils from northern Canada

article