Weitere Publikationen John Long

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Prof John Long Full Publications List documenting 368 publications to July 2020.

BOOKS
1. LONG, J.A. 1991. Dinosaurs of Australia, and other animals of the Mesozoic Era. Reed Books, Sydney, 88pp (B& W, hardback). ISBN 0730103331.
2. LONG, J.A. & McNAMARA, K.J. 1991 Sea Monsters- Bizarre and unusual creatures from seas of the prehistoric past and present. W.A. Museum, Perth, 40 pp. ISBN 0 7209 2996 0.
3. LONG, J.A. 1993. Dinosaurs of Australia and other animals of the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods. Reed Books, Sydney, 88 pp. Fully revised 2nd ed. of earlier book.
4. LONG, J.A. (ed). Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography. Belhaven Press, UK. 369 pp.; also reissued in 1994 by Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA, ISBN0 801847796.
5. LONG, J.A. 1995. The Rise of Fishes: 500 Million Years of Evolution. University of New South Wales Press, Sydney; also Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA.1995. 230 pp. (full colour, hardback). ISBN 0868400785..
6. LONG, J.A. 1997. Mystery of Devil’s Roost. Fremantle Arts Centre Press, Fremantle, WA. 128 pp. (juvenile educational fiction),.
7. McNAMARA, K.J. and LONG, J.A. 1998. The Evolution Revolution. Wiley and Sons, London and New York. 299 pp.ISBN 0471974064, and 0471974062. Hardback and paperback editions.
8. LONG, J.A. 1998. The Dinosaurs of Australia and New Zealand, and other animals of the Mesozoic Era. University of New South Wales Press, Sydney; Harvard University Press, MA. USA. ISBN 0868404489.182 pp. (full colour, hardback).
9. LONG, J.A. 1999. The Hermit of Hyde Park. Gogo Press, Perth, WA. 148 pp. (juvenile educational fiction).
10. BAYNES, A. & LONG, J.A. (eds). Papers in Vertebrate Palaeontology. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57, 424pp. ISBN0730712516.
11. LONG, J.A. 2000. Mountains of Madness - A Journey through Antarctica. Allen & Unwin ISBN 1865083704, 238 pp. Paperback.
12. LONG, J.A. 2000. Mountains of Madness- A Scientist’s Odyssey through Antarctica. Joseph Henry Press, USA (National Academies Press), ISBN 0309070775, Hardcover, 256 pp. Slightly different text and format to previous edition, hence new book.
13. BRETT-SURMAN, M.K. (ed): BROCHU, C., LONG, J., McHENRY, C., SCANLON, J.D. & WILLIS, P. 2000. The Time-Life Guides. Dinosaurs. Time-Life Books, Weldon Owen Publishing, Sydney. ISBN 0-7370-0081-3. 256pp, hardback, full colour. BRETT-SURMAN, M.K. (ed): BROCHU, C., LONG, J., McHENRY, C., SCANLON, J.D. & WILLIS, P. 2000. Dinosaurs. The ultimate guide to prehistoric life. Harper-Collins, London. ISBN 0007100841 256pp, hardback, full colour.
14. MAWSON, R. TALENT, J.A. & LONG, J.A. (eds).Mid-Palaeozoic Biota and Biogeography. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 58, 420 pp. ISBN 0730757927.
15. LONG, J.A. 2002. The Dinosaur Dealers. Allen & Unwin, Sydney. 220 pp.. ISBN 1 86508 829 3, softback. colour photos. UK edition by Orion; USA edition by IPG..
16. LONG, J.A., ARCHER, M., FLANNERY, T.F. & HAND, S. 2002. Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea: One Hundred Million Years of Evolution. University of New South Wales Press, NSW & Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, USA. 244 pp.(full colour, hardback). ISBN 0868404357.
17. LONG, J.A. 2003. The Journey to the Dawn of Time.. Fremantle Arts Centre Press. 152 pp. ISBN 1863683577.
18. LONG, J.A.2004.. Gogo Fish! The Story of the Western Australian State Fossil Emblem. The Western Australian Museum, Perth. 48pp. ISBN 1 920843 08 6. hardback and softback. (for primary kids).
19. LONG. J.A.2004. Its True! Dinosaurs Never Died! Allen & Unwin, Sydney. 88 pp. ISBN 9781741142747 (juvenile, non-fiction).
20. LONG, J.A. 2004. Skrivnost Vraze Jame.*** MIS, Zalozba, Slovenia. 133pp, ISBN 96106506-06-4. Slovenian version of Mystery of Devils Roost.
21. LONG. J.A. 2005.The Big Picture Book. Allen & Unwin, Melbourne unit. 48 pp. (full colour treatment for kids about the formation of the universe and the great events in Earth history and evolution). April 2005.
22. LONG, J.A. (editor) 2005. Little Guides- Dinosaurs. Fog City Press, California, USA. ISBN 1 740893476. 320 pp.
23. LONG, J.A. 2006. Swimming in Stone –The extraordinary Gogo fossils of the Kimberley. Fremantle Arts Centre Press. c. 320 pp. ISBN 1921064331 (adult, popular science).
24. McNAMARA, K.J. & LONG, J.A. 2007. The Evolution Revolution: Design Without Intelligence. Melbourne University Publishing, 304 pp. ISBN 9780522853384.
25. LONG, J.A. 2007. Dinosaurs (The Insiders Guide series). Owen Weldon, Australia; Simon & Schuster, USA, 64pp.ISBN 978-1-74178-486-2. Translated into several languages.
26. LONG. J.A. 2008.The Big Picture Book of Environments. Allen & Unwin, Melbourne unit. 48 pp. ISBN 1741754607. A full colour treatment for kids about the world’s environments and climate change. With teachers notes on publishers website, HB.
27. LONG, J.A. 2009. The Short and Tragic Life of Leo, the Marsupial Lion. W A Museum, Perth. C. 48pp, illustrations by Jill Ruse.ISBN 9781920843946 (Primary non-fiction).HB.
28. LONG. J.A. 2009. The Big Picture Book of Human Civilization. Allen & Unwin, Melbourne unit. 48 pp. ISBN 9781741757002. A full colour treatment for kids about the big ideas in human civilization that define progress- science , art, religion, music etc. HB.
29. LONG, J.A. & SCHOUTEN, P. 2008. Feathered Dinosaurs– From Dinosaurs to Birds. CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, 200 pp. ISBN 9780195372663. HB, Oxford University Press, UK. Hardback.
30. LONG, J.A. 2011. The Rise of Fishes-500 Million years of Evolution, 2nd edition. Johns Hopkins University Press, USA. 288 pp. ISBN 9780801896958. Hardback.
31. STILWELL, J. & LONG, J.A. 2011. Frozen in Time –prehistoric life of Antarctica. CSIRO Press, Collingwood. 250 pp. ISBN 9780643096356. Hardback.
32. LONG, J.A. 2011. Hung Like an Argentine Duck-the prehistoric origins of intimate sex. Fourth Estate (HarperCollins). +278 pp. ISBN 9780732292737. PB. US Edition: The Dawn of the Deed –The Prehistoric Origins of Sex. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, USA. HB, 288 pp. Paperback issued in 2014.
33. LONG, JA. 2019. The Rise of Fishes: 500 Million Years of Evolution. Publisahing House of ther Electronics Industry. 281pp (in Chinese language), ISBN 978-7-121-35170-9.
34. SADLER, J. & LONG, J.A. 2019. Dinosharks! Tangerine Press, Scholastic Inc. ISBN 9781338541014. 48pp (juvenile non-fiction).

SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS
Monographs and large review papers (peer-reviewed)

35. LONG, J.A. 1988. New Palaeoniscoid fishes from the Late Devonian - Early Carboniferous of Victoria, Australia. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists, 7: 1-64.
36.         McNAMARA, K.J., LONG, J.A. & BRIMMELL, K. 1991. Catalogue of type fossils in the Western Australian Museum. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Supplement 39: 1-106.
37.         LONG, J.A. 1991. The long history of Australian fossil fishes. Ch.12 in: The Vertebrate Palaeontology of Australasia, P.V. Rich, J. Monaghan, R.F. Baird & T. Rich, (eds.), Pioneer Design Studios, Lilydale: pp. 337-428.
38.         YOUNG, G.C., LONG, J.A. & RITCHIE, A. 1992. Crossopterygian fishes from the Devonian Aztec Siltstone, Antarctica: systematics, relationships and biogeographic significance. Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 14: 1-77.
39.         LONG, J.A., BARWICK, R.E. & CAMPBELL, K.S.W. 1997. Osteology and functional morphology of the osteolepiform fish Gogonasus andrewsae Long 1985, from the Upper Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 53: 1-89.
40.         ANDREWS, S.M., LONG, J.A., AHLBERG, P.E. , CAMPBELL, K.S.W. & BARWICK, R.E. 2006. The structure of the sarcopterygian Onychodus jandemarrai, n.sp. from Gogo, Western Australia: with a functional interpretation of the skeleton. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Earth Sciences 96 (3): 197-307.

Scholarly book chapters
41.         LONG, J.A. 1982. The history of fishes on the Australian continent. In: The Fossil Vertebrate Record of Australasia, P.V. Rich and E. Thompson, Eds. Monash University off-set printing unit, Melbourne: 53-85.
42.         RICH, P.V., LONG, J.A., RICH, T.H., WARREN, A., MOLNAR, R.E. & MOLNAR, B. 1982. An all too brief and superficial history of Australian vertebrate palaeontology. Ibid.: 1-26.
43.         LONG, J.A., TURNER, S. & KEMP, A. 1982. Contributions to Australian fossil fish biostratigraphy. Ibid. 119-144.
44.         LONG, J.A. & KEMP, N. 1982. Systematic and geographic index of Australian fossil vertebrates. Pisces. Ibid. 700-714.
45.         LONG, J.A. 1984a. The plethora of placoderms: the first vertebrates with jaws? In: Vertebrate Zoogeography and Evolution in Australasia. M. Archer & G. Clayton, Eds. Hesperian Press, Perth: 285-310.
46.         LONG, J.A. & TURNER, S. 1984b. A checklist and bibliography of Australian fossil fishes. In: Vertebrate Zoogeography and Evolution in Australasia. M. Archer & G. Clayton, Eds. Hesperian Press, Perth: 335-354.
47.         LONG, J.A. 1985. Bothriolepis cullodenensis. In: Kadimakara. Extinct Vertebrates of Australia. P.V. Rich & G. Van Tets, Eds. Pioneer Design Studios, Lilydale, Victoria: 109-114.
48.         LONG, J.A. 1989a. Phyllolepid placoderm fishes from the Late Devonian of eastern Victoria. In: Pathways in Geology, E.S. Hills Memorial Volume, R. Le Maitre, Ed. Blackwell Press, pp. 52-58.
49.         TURNER, S. & LONG, J.A. 1989b. Edwin Sherbon Hills - Palaeontological Works. In: Pathways in Geology, E.S. Hills Memorial Volume, R. Le Maitre, Ed. Blackwell Press, pp. 41-51.
50.         LONG, J.A. 1990. Chapter 11. Fishes. In "Evolutionary Trends" ed. by K. J. McNamara, Belhaven Press, London, pp. 255-278.
51.         RICH, T.H., RICH, P.V., McEWEN-MASON, J., WAGSTAFF, B., FLANNERY, T.F., ARCHER, M., MOLNAR, R.E. & LONG, J.A. 1992. Two possible chronological anomalies in the Early Cretaceous tetrapod assemblage of southeastern Australia. In: Aspects of nonmarine Cretaceous Geology, ed. by N. J. Mateer and Chen Peiji, China Ocean Press, Nanjing. pp. 165-176.
52.         LONG, J.A. Preface. In J. Long (ed), Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography, Belhaven Press, London, pp.
53.         LONG, J.A. 1993a. Morphological guide to Palaeozoic vertebrates used in biostratigraphy. In J. Long (ed), Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography, Belhaven Press, London, pp. 3-24.
54.         LONG, J.A. 1993b. Early-Middle Palaeozoic vertebrate extinction events. In J. Long (ed), Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography, Belhaven Press, London, pp. 54-63.
55.         LONG, J.A. 1993c. Palaeozoic vertebrate biostratigraphy of South-East Asia and Japan. In J. Long (ed), Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography, Belhaven Press, London, 277-291.
56.         YOUNG, G.C., LONG, J.A. & TURNER, S. 1993. Appendix 1. Faunal lists of eastern Gondwana Devonian macrovertebrate assemblages. In J. Long (ed.), Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography, Belhaven Press, London, pp. 246-251.
57.         LONG, J.A. 1994. The enigmatic dinosaur faunas of Australia. In Rosenberg, G.D. & Wolberg, D.L. (eds), Dino Fest: Proceedings of the Paleontological Society Special Publication 7, University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, pp. 397-410.
58.         LONG, J.A. & McNAMARA, K.J. 1995. Heterochrony in dinosaur evolution. In Evolutionary Change and Heterochrony, ed. by K.J. McNamara, Wiley Press, London. pp 151-168.
59.         LONG, J.A. & McNAMARA, K.J. 1997a. Heterochrony. In P. Currie & K. Padian (eds), Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs, Academic Press, New York: 311-317.
60.         LONG, J.A. & McNAMARA, K.J. 1997b. Heterochrony- the key to dinosaur evolution. In DinoFest 2 Symposium Volume, D. Wolberg et al. (eds), pp.155-166.
61.         LONG, J.A. 2000. Gnathostomes. In Encyclopedia of Palaeontology, R. Singer (ed.), Vol. 1: 531-533.
62.         LONG, J.A. 2000. Placoderms. In Encyclopedia of Palaeontology, R. Singer (ed.), Vol. 2: 915-919.
63.         LONG, J.A. & BUFFETAUT, E. 2001. A biogeographic comparison of the dinosaurs and associated vertebrate faunas from the Mesozoic of Australia and Southeast Asia. Pp 97-103 in Faunal and Floral Migrations and Evolution in SE Asia-Australasia, Ian Metcalfe, Jeremy M.B. Smith, Mike Morwood & Iain Davidson (eds). A.A. Balkema (Swets & Zeitlinger Publishers) b.v., Lisse.
64.         LONG, J.A. 2001. The rise of fishes. In Palaeobiology II, D.E. Briggs & P.R. Crowther (eds). Blackwell Press, Oxford. pp. 52-56.
65.         LONG, J.A. 2003a. Chapter 6. Middle Devonian to Carboniferous. Section 6.11 Palaeontology. Pp 190-193 in ‘Geology of Victoria’ ed by W. D. Birch, Geological Society of Victoria, Special Publication 23.
66.         LONG, J.A. . 2003b. Chapter 22. Palaeontology, section 22.3.1 fish fossils. Pp.633-635 In ‘Geology of Victoria’ ed by W. D. Birch, Geological Society of Victoria, Special Publication 23.
67.         LONG, J.A. 2004. Fossil Vertebrates- Fish. In ‘Encyclopedia of Geology’, Vol. 2., R.C. Selley, L.R.M. Cocks & I.R. Plimer (eds). pp 462-467. Elsevier, Netherlands.
68.         LONG, J.A. 2008. Giant kangaroos and flightless birds: the origin of Australia’s special wildlife. In : The Seventy Great Mysteries of the Natural World. Ch 38, pp162-166. Thames & Hudson, London. M.J. Benton, Editor.
69.         CLACK, J. A., SHARP, E. & LONG, J.A. 2010. The fossil record of lungfish. In The Biology of Lungfish, J. Jørgensen, A. Kemp and T. Wang, eds.  Science Publishers Inc. Enfield, New Hampshire, USA.Pp1-42.
70.         LONG, J.A.2010. New holodontid lungfishes from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. In “Fossil fishes and related Biota: Morphology, Phylogeny and Paleobiogeography –In honour of Chang Meeman,”. Eds. Yu, X., Maisey, J. & Miao, D. Verlag Pfeil, Berlin. Pp 277-300.
71.         LONG, J.A. 2011. Evolution, missing links and climate change: recent advances in understanding transformational macroevolution.  Pp. 23-36 in Pragmatic Evolution, A. Poiani (ed.), Cambridge University Press, Melbourne.
72.         LONG J.A. 2011.  Case Studies of Intangible Natural Heritage from Museum Collections. Pp. 43-55 in Intangible Natural Heritage: New Perspectives on Natural Objects, E. Dorfman (ed.), Routledge Press, New York.
73.         McNAMARA, K.J. & LONG, J.A. 2012. Heterochrony and dinosaur evolution. Pp. 761-784 in The Complete Dinosaur , 2nd ed. Edited by James Farlow and Mike Brett-Surman, Indiana University Press, Bloomington. Pp. 761-784.
74.         LAURIE, J., CHOO, B., MCLOUGHLIN, S., HAND, S., KERSHAW, P., BROCK, G., TRUSWELL, E., BOLES, W., & LONG, J.A. 2012.  Chapter 3. Living Australia,  pp 121-172 in Building of a Continent -Shaping a Nation: A Geology of Australia, edited by: R. Blewett et al., Australian Government Printer& ANU Press, Canberra.
75.         LONG, J.A. 2018. A salute to our placoderm pioneers –the first time vertebrates had sex. Ch. 8 in Sydney Brenners’s 10-on-10: the Chronicles of Evolution. Sim, S. & Seet. B. (eds.). Wildtype books, Singapore, pp.96-107
76.         LONG, J., CHOO, B. CLEMENT, A. 2019. The evolution of fishes through geological time. In “Evolution and Development of Fishes” Cambridge University Press ed. By Z. Johanson, M. Richter & C. Underwood.pp3-29.
77.         TRINAJSTIC, K., LONG, J. & Z. JOHANSON. 2019. Evolution of vertebrate reproduction In “Evolution and Development of Fishes” Cambridge University Press ed. By Z. Johanson, M.Richter & C. Underwood.

Papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals
78.         LONG, J.A. 1983a. New bothriolepid fishes from the Late Devonian of Victoria, Australia. Palaeontology 26: 295-320.
79.         LONG, J.A. 1983b. A new diplacanthoid acanthodian from the Late Devonian of Victoria, Australia. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 1: 51-65.
80.         LONG, J.A. 1984a. New phyllolepids from Victoria and the relationships of the group. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales,107: 263-308.
81.         LONG, J.A. 1984b. New placoderm fishes from the Early Devonian Buchan Group, eastern Victoria. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 96: 173-186.
82.         LONG, J.A. 1985a. The structure and relationships of a new osteolepiform fish from the Late Devonian of Victoria, Australia. Alcheringa, 9: 1-22.
83.         LONG, J.A. 1985b. A new Cretaceous chimaerid (Pisces; Holocephali) from South Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 109: 49-53.
84.         LONG, J.A. 1985c. New information on the head and shoulder girdle of Canowindra grossi Thomson from the Upper Devonian Mandagery Sandstone, New South Wales. Records of the Australian Museum, 37: 91-99.
85.         LONG, J.A. 1985d. A new osteolepidid fish from the Upper Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum, 12: 361-377.
86.         LONG, J.A. & CAMPBELL, K.S.W. 1985. A new lungfish from the Lower Carboniferous of Victoria. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 97: 87-93.
87.         LONG, J.A. 1986a. A new Late Devonian acanthodian fish from Mt.Howitt, Victoria, Australia, with remarks on acanthodian biogeography.Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 98: 1-17.
88.         LONG, J.A. 1986b. New ischnacanthid acanthodians from the Early Devonian of Australia, with comments on acanthodian interrelationships. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society of London 87: 321-339.
89.         LONG, J.A. & WERDELIN, L. 1986. A new Late Devonian bothriolepid (Placodermi, Antiarcha) from Victoria, with descriptions of others from the state. Alcheringa 10: 355-399.
90.         WERDELIN, L. & LONG, J.A. 1986. Allometry in the placoderm Bothriolepis canadensis and its significance to antiarch evolution. Lethaia, 19: 161-169.
91.         LONG, J.A. 1987a. A redescription of the lungfish Eoctenodus Hills 1929, with a reassessment of the genus Dipterus Sedgwick & Murchison in Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 13: 297-314.
92.         LONG, J.A. 1987b. Upper Devonian conodonts from a large placoderm fish skull, Canning Basin, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum , 13: 501-513.
93.         LONG, J.A. 1987c. A new dinichthyid fish (Placodermi; Arthrodira) from the Upper Devonian of Western Australia, with a discussion of dinichthyid interrelationships. Records of the Western Australian Museum ,13: 515-540.
94.         LONG, J.A. 1987d. Late Devonian fishes from the Gogo Formation, Western Australia - new discoveries. Search 18 (4): 203-205.
95.         LONG, J.A. 1987e. An unusual osteolepiform fish from the Late Devonian of Victoria, Australia. Palaeontology 30 (4): 839-852.
96.         TURNER, S. & LONG, J.A. 1987. Carboniferous palaeoniscoid fishes (Osteichthyes, Actinopterygii) from Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 25: 193-200.
97.         LONG, J.A. 1988a. ?Campbellodus sp. from the Upper Devonian Napier Formation, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 14:141-144.
98.         LONG, J.A. 1988b. Late Devonian fishes from the Gogo Formation, Western Australia. National Geographic Research and Exploration 4: 438-452.
99.         LONG, J.A. 1988c. New information on the arthrodire Tubonasus from Gogo, Western Australia. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists, 7: 81-85.
100.       LONG, J.A. 1988d. A new camuropiscid arthrodire (Pisces, Placodermi) from Gogo, Western Australia. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society of London 94: 233-258.
101.       LONG, J.A. , TURNER, S. & YOUNG, G.C. 1988. A Devonian fish fauna from subsurface sediments in the eastern Officer Basin, South Australia. Alcheringa 12: 61-78.
102.       LONG, J.A. & YOUNG, G.C. 1988. Acanthothoracid remains from the Early Devonian of New South Wales, including a complete sclerotic capsule and pelvic girdle. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists, 7: 65-80.
103.       McNAMARA, K.J., KENDRICK, G.W.., BAYNES, A., FRANKEL, E., GALE, A., HOLST, R., LONG, J. & MAISEY, J.1988. Brolgas on the Lyndon River. The Western Australian Naturalist 18: p. 24
104.       LONG, J.A. 1989a. A new rhizodontiform fish from the Early Carboniferous of Victoria, Australia, with remarks on the phylogenetic position of the group. Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology 9: 1-17.
105.       LONG, J.A. 1989b. Biogeographic and biostratigraphic significance of the Devonian fish fauna from the Aztec Siltstone, Antarctica. New Zealand Antarctic Record 9 (1): 45-51.
106.       LONG, J.A. & BURRETT, C.F. 1989a. Early Devonian conodonts from the Kuan Tung Formation, Thailand: systematics and implications to biogeography. Records of the Australian Museum. 41: 121-133.
107.       LONG, J.A. & BURRETT, C.F.1989b. Fish from the Upper Devonian of the Shan-Thai Terrane indicate proximity to East Gondwana and South China Terranes. Geology 17: 811-813.
108.       LONG, J.A. & BURRETT, C.F. 1989c. Tubular phosphatic microproblematica from the Early Ordovician of China. Lethaia 22: 427-435.
109.       LONG, J.A. 1990a. Two new arthrodires (placoderm fishes) from the Upper Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 28, De Vis Symposium Volume, pp. 51-64.
110.       LONG, J.A. 1990b. Late Devonian chondrichthyans and other micro vertebrate remains from Northern Thailand. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 10 (1): 59-71.
111.       LONG, J.A. 1990c. Heterochrony and the origin of tetrapods. Lethaia 23: 157-166.
112.       LONG, J.A. & INGAVAT, R. 1990. Discovery of Late Devonian micro vertebrate fauna near Mae Sariang. Mining and Mineral Gazette, Royal Thai Dept. of Mines (Bangkok), 34: 26-31.
113.       BURRETT, C.F., LONG, J.A. & STAIT, B. 1990. Early-Middle Palaeozoic biogeography of Asian Terranes derived from Gondwana. Memoirs of the Geological Society of London 12: 163-174.
114.       LONG, J.A., BURRETT, C.F., NGAN, P.K. & JANVIER, P. 1990. A new bothriolepid antiarch (Pisces, Placodermi), from the Devonian of Do Son Peninsula, northern Vietnam. Alcheringa 14: 181-194.
115.       WOLFE, K.J., LONG, J.A.. BRADSHAW, M.A., HARMSEN, F. & KIRKBRIDE. M, 1990. Fish-bearing Aztec Siltstone (Devonian) in the Cook Mountains, Antarctica. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics 33: 511-514.
116.       LONG, J.A. 1991a. Late Devonian fishes from the Munabia Sandstone, Carnarvon Basin, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 15: 503-515.
117.       LONG, J.A. 1991b. Arthrodire predation by Onychodus (Pisces, Crossopterygii) from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 15: 503-516.
118.       BENNETT, S.C. & LONG, J.A. 1991. A large pterodactyloid pterosaur from the Late Cretaceous (Late Maastrichtian) of Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 15: 435-444.
119.       LONG, J.A. 1992a. Gogodipterus paddyensis (Miles) gen. nov., a new chirodipterid lungfish from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. The Beagle, Northern Territory Museum 9: 11-20.
120.       LONG, J.A. 1992b. First dinosaur bones from Western Australia. 5 figs, The Beagle, Northern Territory Museum, 9: 21-28.
121.       LONG, J.A. 1992c. Cranial anatomy of two new Late Devonian lungfishes (Pisces, Dipnoi) from Mt. Howitt, Victoria. Records of the Australian Museum. 44: 299-318.
122.       LONG, J.A.1993a. Cranial ribs in Devonian lungfishes and the origin of air-breathing. Memoir of the. Australasian Association of Palaeontologists 15: 199-210.
123.       WYRWOLL, K.-H., KENDRICK, G.W.. & LONG, J.A. 1993. The geomorphology and Late cenozoic geomorphological evolution of the Cape Range -Exmouth Gulf region. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 45: 1-23.
124.       McLOUGHLIN, S. & LONG, J.A. 1994. New Records of Devonian Plants from southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Geological Magazine 131: 81-90.
125.       LONG, J. A., CAMPBELL, K.S.W. & BARWICK, R.E. 1994. A phylogenetically significant new genus of lungfish from the Early Devonian of Victoria. Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology 14: 127-131.
126.       LONG, J.A. 1994.A second incisoscutid arthrodire (Pisces, Placodermi) from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Alcheringa 18: 59-69.
127.       LONG, J.A.& MACKNESS, B. 1994. Studies of the Late Cainozoic diprotodontid marsupials of Australia. 4. The Bacchus Marsh Diprotodons -Geology, Sedimentology and Taphonomy. Records of the South Australian Museum 27: 95-110.
128.       LONG, J.A. 1995a. A new groenlandaspidid arthrodire (Pisces; Placodermi) from the Middle Devonian Aztec Siltstone, South Victoria Land, Antarctica. Records of the Western Australian Museum 17: 35-41.
129.       LONG, J.A. 1995b. A new plourdosteid arthrodire from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Palaeontology 38: 39-62.
130.       LONG, J.A. 1995c. A theropod dinosaur bone from the Late Cretaceous Molecap Greensand, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 17: 143-146.
131.       LONG, J.A. & YOUNG, G.C., 1995. Sharks from the Middle-Late Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Records of the Western Australian Museum 17: 287-308.
132.       MCLOUGHLIN, S., HAIG, D.S., BACKHOUSE, J., HOLMES, M.A., LONG, J.A. & MCNAMARA, K.J. 1995. Oldest Cretaceous sequence, Giralia Anticline, Carnarvon Basin, Western Australia: Late Hauterivian-Barremian. AGSO Journal 15: 445-468.
133.       FOX, R.C., CAMPBELL, K.C.W., BARWICK, R.E. & LONG, J.A., 1995. A new osteolepiform fish from the Lower Carboniferous Raymond Formation, Drummond Basin, Memoirs of the Queensland. Museum 38: 97-221.
134.       LONG, J.A. & CRUICKSHANK, A.R.I. 1996. First record of an Early Cretaceous theropod dinosaur bone from Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 18: 219-222.
135.       LONG, J.A., ANDERSON, E., GESS, R. & HILLER, N. 1997. New placoderm fishes from the Upper Devonian of South Africa. Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology 17: 253-268.
136.       LONG, J.A. 1997. Ptyctodontid fishes from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia, with a revision of the European genus Ctenurella Ørvig 1960. Geodiversitas (Paris Museum of Natural History) 19: 515-556.
137.       CRUICKSHANK, A.R.I. & LONG, J.A. 1997. A new species of pliosaurid reptile from the Early Cretaceous Birdrong Sandstone of Western Australia. Records of the Western Australia Museum 18: 263-276
138.       LONG, J.A. & CRUICKSHANK, A.R.I. 1998. Further records of plesiosaurian reptiles from the Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods of Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 19: 47-56.
139.       LONG, J.A., VICKERS-RICH, P., HIRSCH, K., BRAY, E. and TUNIZ, C. 1998. The Cervantes egg: an early Malagasy tourist to Australia Records of the Western Australian Museum. 19: 39-46.
140.       LONG, J.A. & MOLNAR, R., E. 1998. A new Jurassic theropod dinosaur from Western Australia Records of the Western Australian Museum. 19: 221-229.
141.       BURROW, C.J., LONG, J.A. and TURNER, S. 1998. Lower Devonian microvertebrates from the Point Hibbs Formation, Tasmania. Alcheringa 22: 9-20.
142.       LONG, J.A. 1999. A new genus of fossil coelacanth (Osteichthyes; Coelacanthiformes) from the Middle Devonian of southeastern Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement No. 57: 37-54.
143.       LONG, J.A. & AHLBERG, P. 1999. New observations on the snouts of rhizodont fishes. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57: 169-174.
144.       ANDERSON, M. E., LONG, J.A., EVANS, F.J., ALMOND, J.E., THERON, J.N., & BENDER, P.A. 1999. Biogeographic affinities of Middle and Late Devonian fishes of South Africa. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57: 157-168.
145.       CRUICKSHANK, A.R.I., FORDYCE. E. & LONG, J.A. 1999. Recent developments in Australasian Sauropterygian palaeontology. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57: 201-206.
146.       HAMPE, O. & LONG, J.A. 1999. The histology of Middle-Late Devonian chondrichthyan teeth from South Victoria Land, Antarctica. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57: 23-36.
147.       ANDERSON, M. E., LONG, J.A., GESS, R.W. & HILLER, N. 1999. An unusual new fossil shark (Pisces: Chondrichthyes) from the Late Devonian of South Africa. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57: 151-156.
148.       ANDERSON, M.E., ALMOND, J.E., EVANS, F.J. & LONG, J.A. 1999. Devonian (Emsian-Eifelian) fish from the Lower Bokkeveld Group (Ceres Subgroup), South Africa. Journal of African Earth Sciences 29: 179-194.
149.       LONG, J.A. & TRINAJSTIC, K. 2000. Devonian micro vertebrate faunas of Western Australia. Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg, 22: 471-485.
150.       LONG, J.A. & ARTABAZ, A. 2000. Occurrence of Givetian micro vertebrate remains from the Soh area,northern Esfahan, Iran. Supplement to the Records of the Western Australian Museum 58: 191-196.
151.       LONG, J.A. & HARAPETIAN, V. 2000. Famennian microvertebrates from the Dalmeh area, central Iran. Supplement to the Records of the Western Australian Museum 58: 211-222.
152.       HARAPETIAN, V., YAZDI, M. & LONG, J.A. 2000. Devonian vertebrate biostratigraphy of central Iran. Supplement to the Records of the Western Australian Museum 58: 241-248.
153.       TALENT, J.A., MAWSON, R., AITCHISON, J.C., BECKER, R.T., BELL, K.N., BRADSHAW, M.A., BURROW, C.J., COOK, A.G., DARGAN, G.M., DOUGLAS, J.G., EDGECOMBE, G.D., FEIST.,M., JONES, P.J., LONG, J.A., PHILLIPS-ROSS, J.R., PICKETT, J.W.,PLAYFORD, G., RICKARDS, R.B., WEBBY, B.D., WINCHESTER-SEETO, T., WRIGHT, A.J., YOUNG, G.C. & ZHEN,Y.-Y. 2000. Devonian palaeobiogeography of Australia and adjoining regions. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 23: 167-257. Vertebrata: (Young, Long & Burrow) pp. 209-219, figs 13-17.
154.       LONG, J.A. 2001. On the relationships of Onychodus and Psarolepis. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 21: 815-820.
155.       LONG, J.A. , BURROW, C.J. & RITCHIE, A. 2004. A new Late Devonian acanthodian fish from the Hunter Formation near Grenfell, New South Wales. Alcheringa 28: 147-156.
156.       LONG. J.A. & GORDON, M. 2004. The greatest step in vertebrate history: a paleobiological review of the fish-tetrapod transition: Physiological and Biochemical Zoology77 (5): 700-719.
157.       YOUNG, G.C. & LONG, J.A.2005.Phyllolepid placoderm fish remains from the Devonian Aztec Siltstone, Southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Antarctic Science 17 (3): 387-408.
158.       KEAR, B.P., LONG, J.A. & MARTIN, J.E. 2005. A review of Australian mosasaur occurrences. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 84-3: 307-313.
159.       JOHANSON, Z., LONG, J.A., JANVIER, P. & TALENT, J. 2006.Oldest coelacanth from the Early Devonian of Australia. Biology Letters 3 (1): on line pub March 2006
160.       LONG, J.A., YOUNG, G.C., HOLLAND, T., SENDEN, T.J. & FITZGERALD, E.M. 2006. An exceptional Devonian fish from Australia sheds light on tetrapod evolution. Nature 444: 199-202 (Nov 9th 2006).
161.       HOLLAND, T.M., LONG, J.A., WARREN, A. & GARVEY, J.M. 2007. Second Specimen of the lower actinopterygian Novogonatodus Long 1988 from the Early Carboniferous of Victoria. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 18, 1: 1-10.
162.       PRIDEUX, G.P., LONG, J.A., et al. 2007. An arid adapted fauna from the Middle Pleistocene of Australia. Nature 445: 422-425.
163.       TRINAJSTIC, K., MARSHALL, E., LONG, J. & BIFIELD, K. 2007. Exceptional preservation of nerve and muscle tissues in Devonian placoderm fish and their phylogenetic implications. Biology Letters doi10.1098/rsbl.2006.0604 (published online Feb 7th 2007).
164.       JOHANSON, Z., LONG, J.A., JANVIER, P. & TALENT, J. & WARREN, J.W. 2007. New onychodontiform (Osteichthyes; Sarcopterygii) from the Lower Devonian of Australia. Journal of Paleontology 81 (5) 1034-46.
165.       HOLLAND, T., WARREN, A., JOHANSON, Z., LONG, J., PARKER, K. & GARVEY, G. 2007 A new species of Barameda (Rhizodontida) and heterochrony in the rhizodontid pectoral fin. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27 (2) 295-315., 12 figs.
166.       LONG, J.A., TRINAJSTIC, K., YOUNG, G.C. & SENDEN, T. 2008. Live birth in the Devonian. Nature 453: 650-652.
167.       LONG, J.A., CHOO, B. & YOUNG, G.C. (2008). A new basal actinopterygian fish from the Middle Devonian Aztec Siltstone of Antarctica. Antarctic Science 20: 393-412. (IF 1.57)
168.       LONG. J.A. & HOLLAND, T. 2008. A possible elpistostegalid fish from the Middle Devonian of Victoria. Proc. Roy. Soc. Victoria 120 (1): 186-193.
169.       LONG, J.A., TRINAJSTIC, K. & JOHANSON, Z. 2009. Devonian arthrodire embryos and the origin of internal fertilization in vertebrates. Nature 457: 1124-27.
170.       BURROW, C.J., LONG, J.A. & TRINAJSTIC, K. 2009. Disarticulated acanthodian and chondrichthyan remains from the upper Middle Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria land, Antarctica. Antarctic Science 21: 71-88.
171.       CHOO, B. LONG, J.A. & TRINAJSTIC, K. 2009. A new genus and species of basal actinopterygian fish from the Upper Devonian Gogo Formation of Western Australia. Acta Zoologica. 90,( Suppl. 1): 194-210.
172.       HOLLAND, T. & LONG, J.A. 2009. On the phylogenetic position of Gogonasus andrewsae Long 1985, within the Tetrapodomorpha. Acta Zoologica. 90,(Suppl. 1): 285-296.
173.       AHLBERG,P.E., TRINAJSTIC, K., JOHANSON, Z. & LONG, J.A. 2009. Pelvic claspers confirm chondrichthyan-like internal fertilization in arthrodires. Nature 460: 888-889.
174.       JOHANSON, Z , ERICSSON,R., LONG,J.A., EVANS, F. & JOSS, J. 2009. Development of the axial skeleton and median fins in the Queensland lungfish Neoceratodus. The Open Journal of Zoology 2: 91-101.
175.       TRINAJSTIC, K. & LONG, J.A. 2009. A new genus and species of ptyctodont (Placodermi) from the Late Devonian Gneudna Formation, Western Australia, and an analysis of ptyctodont phylogeny. Geological Magazine 146 : 743-786.
176.       LONG, J.A. & CLEMENT, A. 2009. The postcranial anatomy of two Middle Devonian lungfishes (Osteichthyes, Dipnoi) from Mt.Howitt, Victoria,. Australia. Mems Mus. Vict. 66: 189-202.
177.       YOUNG, G.C., BURROW,C.J., LONG, J.A., TURNER, S. & CHOO, B. 2010.  Devonian macrovertebrate assemblages and biogeography of East Gondwana (Australia, Antarctica)   Palaeoworld 19: 55-74
178.       CLEMENT, A. & LONG, J.A. 2010. Air-breathing adaptation in a marine Devonian lungfish. Biology Letters 6: doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.1033 (on-line Feb 10th) 4pp.
179.       HOLLAND, T., LONG, J.A. & SNITTING, D. 2010. New information on the enigmatic tetrapodomorph fish Marsdenichthys longioccipitus (Long, 1985). J. Vert. Paleontol. 30: 68-77.
180.       CLEMENT, A. & LONG, J.A.2010. Xeradipterus gen. nov., a new holodontid lungfish from the Late Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. J. Vert. Paleontol.30: 681-695.
181.       LONG, J.A. & TRINAJSTIC, K. 2010. The Late Devonian Gogo Formation Lagerstatte –Exceptional preservation and Diversity in early Vertrebrates. Annual Reviews of Earth and Planetary Sciences 38: 665-680.
182.       LONG,J.A., HALL, B.K., McNAMARA, K.J., & SMITH, M.M. 2010  The phylogenetic origin of jaws in vertebrates: developmental plasticity and heterochrony.   Kirtlandia 57: 43-50.
183.       BURROW, C. J., TRINAJSTIC, K. & LONG, J.A. 2012. First acanthodian from the Upper Devonian (Frasnian) Gogo Formation of Western Australia. Historical Biology (March 2012), ifirst DOI:10.1080/08912963.2012.660150, 1-9.
184.       TRINAJSTIC, K., LONG, J.A., JOHANSON, Z., YOUNG, G.C. & SENDEN, T. 2012. New morphological information on the ptyctodontid fishes (Placodermi, Ptyctodontida) from Western Australia. Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology 32: 757-780.
185.       LU, J., ZHU, M., LONG, J.A. , ZHAO, W., SENDEN, T. & QIAO, T. 2012. The earliest known stem-tetrapod from the Lower Devonian of China. Nature Communications DOI: 10.1038/ncomms2170 (Article) pp1-7.
186.       LONG, J.A. & DAESCHLER, E.B. 2013. First articulated phyllolepid placoderm from North America, with commenst on phyllolepid systematics. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci Philadelphia 162: 33-46.
187.       TRINAJSTIC. K., SANCHEZ, S. , DUPRET, V., TAFFOREAU, P. , LONG, J.A. , YOUNG, G.C., SENDEN, T. BOISVERT, C., NICOLA POWER, N. & AHLBERG, P.E. 2013. Musculature of the earliest jawed vertebrates. Science, 341: 160-164.
188.       GRAHAM, J.B., WEGNER, N. LAUREN A. MILLER, COREY J. JEW, N.C. LAI, RACHEL M. BERQUIST, LAWRENCE R. FRANK & LONG, J.A. 2013. Spiracular air breathing in polypterid fishes and its implications for aerial respiration in stem tetrapods., Nature Communications, 55:3022 | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms4022
189.       LARGE, R.R., HALPIN, J.A., DANYUSHEVSKY, L.V., MASLENNIKOV, V.Y., BULL, S.W., LONG, J.A., LOTTERMOSER, B.G., GREGHORY, D., LOUNENEJEVA, E., LYONS,T.W., MCGOLDRICK, P., HAINES, P.W., SACK,P.J. & CALVER, C.R.A. 2014. Trace element content of sedimentary pyrite as a new proxy for deep-time ocean–atmosphere evolution. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 389: 209-220.
190.       LONG, J.A., YOUNG, G.C. & MARK-KURIK. E. 2015. Taxonomic revision of buchanosteoid placoderms (Arthrodira) from the Early Devonian of south-eastern Australia and Arctic Russia. Australian Journal of Zoology 62: 26-43.
191.       YOUNG, G.C. & LONG. J.A. 2014. New arthrodires from the Aztec Siltstone (late Middle Devonian) of southern Victoria land, Antarctica. Australian Journal of Zoology 62: 44-62.
192.       TRINAJSTIC, K., ROELOFS, B., BURROW, C.J., LONG, J.A. & TURNER, S., 2014. Devonian vertebrates of the Canning and Carnarvon Basins with an overview of Paleozoic vertebrates of Western Australia. J. Roy. Soc. W. Aust. 97: 133-151.
193.       LONG, J.A., MARK-KURIK, E., JOHANSON, Z., LEE, M.S.Y., YOUNG, G.C., ZHU, M., AHLBERG, P.E., NEWMAN, M., JONES,R. DEN BLAAUWEN, J., B.CHOO, TRINAJSTIC, K. 2015. Copulation in antiarch placoderms and the origin of gnathostome internal fertilisation. Nature, 517: 196-199.
194.       TRINAJSTIC, K.M., BOISVERT,C., LONG, J.A., MAKSIMENKO, A. & JOHANSON, Z. 2015. Pelvic and reproductive structures in placoderms (stem gnathostomes). Biological Reviews (Cambridge) 90: 467-501. Early on line view 2014: doi: 10.1111/brv.12118 (35pp).
195.       LONG, J.A., BURROW, C., GINTER, M. MAISEY, J., COATES, M.I. & TRINAJSTIC, K.M. 2015. First shark from the Late Devonian (Frasnian) Gogo Formation, Western Australia sheds new light on the development of tessellated calcified cartilage. PLOS 1, 10(5): e0126066. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0126066 (IF=3.4)
196.       LONG, J.A., LARGE, R.R., LEE, M.S.Y., BENTON, M., DANYSHEVSKY, L., CHIAPPE, L.M., HALPIN, J.A., CANTRILL & D., LOTTERMOSER, B. 2015. Severe Selenium depletion in the Phanerozoic oceans as a factor in three global mass extinction events. Gondwana Research doi:10.1016/j.gr.2015.10.001 (IF=8.235; ranked #1 in Earth Sciences).
197.       LARGE, R.R., HALPIN,J.A., E. LOUNEJEVA, L.V. DANYUSHEVSKY, V.V. MASLENNIKOV, GREGORY, D., SACK, P.J., P.W.HAINES, LONG, J.A., MAKOUNDI, C., STEPANOV, A.S. 2015. Cycles of nutrient trace elements in the Phanerozoic ocean. Gondwana Research 28: 1282-1293. (IF=8.235; ranked #1 in Earth Sciences
198.       TURNER, S. & LONG, J.A. 2015. The Woodward factor: Arthur Smith Woodward’s legacy to geology in Australia and Antarctica. From: Johanson, Z., Barrett, P. M., Richter, M. & Smith, M. (eds) Arthur Smith Woodward: His Life and Influence on Modern Vertebrate Palaeontology. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 430: http://doi.org/10.1144/SP430.15.
199.       CLEMENT, A., AHLBERG, P.E., LONG, J.A. 2016. The dipnoan buccal pump reconstructed in 3D and implications for air-breathing in Devonian lungfishes. Paleobiology DOI: 10.1017/pab.2015.41 (16pp; IF= 2.658; ISI ranked 3/49 in Palaeontology).
200.       CLEMENT, A.C., STRAND, R., NYSJÖ, J., LONG, J.A., AHLBERG, P.E. applying the brain-neurocranial spatial relationship in an extant lungfish to a fossil endocast. Royal Society Open Science 3: 160307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160307.
201.       LONG, J.A. 2016. Quantifying scientific significance of a fossil site: the Gogo Fossil sites (Late Devonian, Western Australia) as a case study. Memoirs of Museum Victoria 74: 5-15.
202.       CLEMENT, A., CHALLANDS, T.J., LONG, J.A., AHLBERG, P.E. 2016. The cranial endocast of Dipnorhynchus sussmilchi (Sarcopterygii: Dipnoi) and the interrelationships of stem-group lungfishes. PeerJ DOI 10.7717/peerj.2539 (19pp).
203.       QIAO, T., KING, B., LONG, J.A., AHLBERG, P.E., ZHU, M. 2016. Early gnathostome phylogeny revisited: multiple method consensus. PLoS ONE 11(9):e0163157. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0163157.
204.       KING, B., QIAO, T., LEE. M., ZHU, M., LONG, J.A. 2016. Bayesian Morphological Clock Methods Resurrect Placoderm Monophyly and Reveal Rapid Evolution in the Early History of Jawed Vertebrates. Systematic Biology (IF=12) DOI:10.1093/sysbio/syw107, 1-18.
205.       LONG, J.A. 2017. Why Australian vertebrate animals are so unique - a palaeontological perspective. General and Comparative Endocrinology, 244: 2-10.
206.       SERRANO, F.J., CHIAPPE, L.M., PALMQVIST, P., LONG, J., SANZ, J.L. 2017. Paleoatmospheric changes and the major avian radiations. In Contrabuciones Cientificas del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales Bernardino Rivadavia. 7: 141-156.
207.       RIPPLE, W.J., WOLF, C., NEWSOME, T., GALETTI, M., ALAMGIR, M., CRIST, E., et al. (2017). World Scientists' Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice. BIOSCIENCE, 167(12) pp. 1026-1028. (+15,000 author/cosignatories, including J.LONG).
208.       KING, B., HU, Y., LONG, J.A. 2018. Electroreception in early vertebrates-survey, evidence and new information. Palaeontology doi: 10.1111/pala.12346, 2018: (34pp).
209.       CLEMENT, A., KING, B., GILES, S., CHOO, B., AHLBWERG, P.E., YOUNG, G.C., LONG, J.A. Neurocranial anatomy of an enigmatic Early Devonian 1 fish sheds light on early osteichthyan evolution. eLife 2018;7:e34349 (28pp).
210.       KING, B., YOUNG, G.C., LONG, J.A. 2018. New information on Brindabellaspis stensioi Young, 1980, highlights morphological disparity in Early Devonian placoderms. Royal Society Open Science, http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.180094 (14pp).
211.       CHEVRINAIS, M., JOHANSON, Z., TRINAJSTIC, K., LONG, J., MOREL, C., RENAUD, C.B. & CLOUTIER, R. 2018. Origins of internal fertilization revealed by Devonian agnathan pelvic girdle and intromittent organs. Palaeontology doi: 10.1111/pala.12379 (13pp).
212.       LONG, J.A. & TRINAJSTIC, K. 2018. A review of recent discoveries of exceptionally preserved fossil fishes from the Gogo sites (Late Devonian, Western Australia). Earth and Environmental Sciences, Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 108, 111-117.
213.       LONG, J., CLEMENT, A., CHOO, B. 2018. New Insights into the Origins and Radiation of the Mid Palaeozoic Gondwanan Stem Tetrapods. Earth and Environmental Sciences, Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755691018000750.
214.       CHOO, B., LU, J., GILES, S., TRINAJSTIC, K., LONG, J.A. 2018. A new genus and species of actinopterygian with spinose ornamentation from the Upper Devonian Gogo Formation, Western Australia. Papers in Palaeontology, 2018, 1-22. doi: 10.1002/spp2.1243.
215.       SERRANO, F.J., CHIAPPE, L.M., PALMQVIST, P., FIGUERIDO, B., LONG, J., SANZ, J.L. 2019. The effect of long-term atmospheric changes on the macroevolution of birds. Gondwana Research 65: 86-96.
216.       DUTEL, H., GAALAND, M., TAFFOREAU, P., LONG, J.A., FAGAN, M., JANVIER, P., HERREL, A., SANTIN, M.D., CLEMENT, G., HERBIN, M. 2019. Neurocranial development of the coelacanth and the evolution of the sarcopterygian head. Nature 569: 556-559. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1117-3.
217.       TRINAJSTIC, K., LONG, J.A. & IVANOV, S. 2019. A new genus of ptyctodont (Placodermi) from the Late Devonian of Baltic area. Palaeontologia Electronica, https://palaeo-electronica.org/content/2019/2490-a-new-baltic-ptyctodont
218.       CLOUTIER, R., CLEMENT, A.M., LEE, M.S.Y., NOEL, R., BECHARD, I.,ROY, V., LONG, J.A. 2020. Elpistostege and the origin of the vertebrate hand. Nature (Article).
219.       LONG, J.A., BURROW, C.J., TJHOMPSON, V. & TURNER S. Middle Devonian sharks from the Kevington Creek Formation, Mansfield Victoria. (in press )F. Pfeil, Publisher, Munich. Special Festchrift Volume honouring Dr John Maisey.
220.       TRINAJSTIC, K., LONG, J., SANCHEZ, S., BOISVERT, C. A., SNITTING, D., TAFFOREAU, P., DUPRET, V., CLEMENT, A. M., CURRIE, P., ROELOFS, B., BEVITT, J. J., AND AHLBERG, P. A. Exceptional preservation of 3D soft tissue and organs, heart, liver and digestive tract, in Devonian placoderms. Science (in review).
221.       CLEMENT, A., MENSFORTH, C.L., CHALLANDS, T.J., COLLIN, S.P. & LONG, J.A. 2021. Brain reconstruction across the fish-tetrapod transition; insights from modern amphibians. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9: 640345/ doi 10.3389/fevo.2021.640345. pp1-10.\.
222.       BRADSHAW, C.B., CHALKER, J.M., CRABTREE, S.A., EIJKELKAMP, B.A., LONG, J.A., SMITH, J.R., TRINAJSTIC, K.,WEISBECKER, V. in review. A fairer way to compare researchers at any career stage and in any discipline using open-access citation data. PLOS One (published 2021)
223.       CHOO, B., HOLLAND, T., LONG, J.A., CLEMENT, A.M., KING, B., CHALLANDS, T. & YOUNG, G.C.. in review. A new stem-tetrapod fish from the middle-late Devonian of central Australia. Journal of Vertebrate paleontology, in review.
224.       CLEMENT, A.C., CHALLANDS, T.J., , RICHARD CLOUTIER, PER E. AHLBERG LAURENT HOULE,& JOHN A. LONG. Morphometric Analysis of Lungfish Endocasts Elucidates Early Dipnoan Palaeoneurological Evolution Submitted Sept1.2021. eLIFE in review)


POPULAR PUBLICATIONS

225.       LONG, J.A. 1983a Deep-bodied spiny fish. Culmacanthus stewarti. In: Prehistoric Animals of Australia. M. Archer & S. Quirk, Eds. The Australian Museum, Sydney: 20-21.
226.       LONG, J.A. 1983b. Armoured tube-nose fish. Rolfosteus canningensis. Ibid. 22-23. LONG, J.A. 1983ec Devonian fishes in Victoria. Labtalk, Occasional papers in Earth Sciences, November-December 1983: 19-26.
227.       LONG, J.A. 1983d. Armoured tube-nose fish. In: Omega (Australian Science Magazine) Nov.-Dec., 1989, p. 46.
228.       LONG, J.A. 1988a. The extraordinary fishes of Gogo. New Scientist , November 19, 1988, 1639: 41-45.
229.       LONG, J.A. 1988b. Did fish evolve into animals in Australia? The Sydney Sun-Herald, Science feature, Dec. 18th, 1988, p. 45.
230.       LONG, J.A.1989a. Did the first tetrapods evolve in Australia? The big step in vertebrate evolution. The Fossil Collector 28: 11-18.
231.       LONG, J.A. 1989b. 360 million-year-old Gogo fishes. Geo, 11 (4): 102-113.
232.       LONG, J.A. 1990. The educational value of dinosaurs. The Western Teacher, 20/7/90: p.7.
233.       LONG, J.A. 1990. Australian dinosaurs -we do have them! Reflections on Australian dinosaur finds. Dinonews 1: p.2 (The Western Australian Museum, ISSN 1036-7772).
234.       LONG, J.A. 1990. How brontosaurs knocked the meat-eaters for six. New sauropod dinosaur discoveries from China. Dinonews 1: p.3.
235.       LONG, J.A. 1990. Western Australia’s first pterosaur find. Dinonews 1: p.4.
236.       LONG, J.A. 1990. New ankylosaur dinosaur find from Queensland. First discovery of an early complete ankylosaur from Australia. Dinonews 1: p.5.
237.       LONG, J.A. 1990. Fur coats for flesh-eaters? Polar dinosaur discoveries from Victoria. Dinonews 1: p.6-7.
238.       LONG, J.A. 1990. News updates, Dinosaur Quiz. Dinonews 1: p. 8-12.
239.       LONG, J.A. 1991. A new horned meat-eating dinosaur from South America- Carnotaurus sastrei. Dinonews 2: p.3-4. (The Western Australian Museum, ISSN 1036-7772).
240.       LONG, J.A. 1991. More polar dinosaurs from Victoria. The hypsilophodonts ... gazelles of the dinosaur world. Dinonews 2: p.7-8.
241.       LONG, J.A. 1991. "Albert the Dinosaur" is now a Gorgosaurus. Dinonews 2: p.9.
242.       LONG, J.A. 1991. Is Australia’s biggest dinosaur a Brachiosaurus? Dinonews 2: p.13.
243.       LONG, J.A. 1991. I want to work on dinosaurs when I grow up. Becoming a palaeontologist. Dinonews 2: pp. 16-17.
244.       LONG, J.A. 1991. Western Australia’s fossil treasures. World firsts for western Australia. Dinonews 2: pp. 18-19.
245.       LONG, J.A. 1991. Sea Monsters from the age of dinosaurs. The largest marine reptiles that ever lived. Dinonews 3: pp. 6-7.
246.       LONG, J.A. 1991. Oviraptorids. The weirdest looking dinosaurs? Dinonews 3: p.9 and cover (p.1).
247.       LONG, J.A. 1991. First dinosaur bones from Western Australia. Scrappy finds give hope for new discoveries. Dinonews 3: p.10.
248.       LONG, J.A. 1991. New dinosaurs. Dinonews 3: p. 15.
249.       LONG, J.A. 1991. The Great Aussie Dinosaur Hunt. Preliminary results- new finds. Dinonews 3: pp. 16-17.
250.       RICH, T., RICH, P.V. & LONG, J.A. 1991. New carnivorous dinosaur finds from Victoria. Dinosaurs of darkness expedition 1990-91. Dinonews 3: p.8.
251.       LONG, J.A. & McNAMARA, K.J. 1991. Sea Monsters. Bizarre and unusual creatures from seas of the prehistoric past and present. The Western Australian Museum, Perth. 42 pp..
252.       LONG, J.A. 1992. Dinosaurs of Antarctica. Exciting finds from the Frozen continent. Dinonews 4: pp. 3-5.
253.       LONG, J.A. 1992. Agilisaurus louderbacki. A new ornithopod dinosaur from China. Dinonews 4: p.11.
254.       LONG, J.A. 1992. A dinosaur battle. Dinonews 4: pp. 12-14.
255.       LONG, J.A. 1992. Fossil hunting in Antarctica. Finding fossils on the frozen continent can be hazardous. Dinonews 4: pp. 16-18.
256.       LONG, J.A. 1992. New Books. Riversleigh- The story of animals in ancient rainforests of inland Australia (review of). Dinonews 4: p.23.
257.       LONG, J.A. 1992. The dinosaur faunas of Australia: strange relicts and tantalising fragments. In "Advances in Dinosaur Studies" [in Japanese]. J.I.C.C. Publishing, Tokyo, Japan, pp. 156-176.
258.       LONG, J.A. & McNAMARA, K.J., 1992. The Fact of Evolution. Scios 27 (2) : 25-31.
259.       LONG, J.A. 1992. Dyslocosaurus, a new sauropod dinosaur from North America. Dinonews 5: 6.
260.       LONG, J.A. 1992. New Tyrannosaurus skeletons. Dinonews 5: 10-11.
261.       LONG, J.A. 1993. Dinosaurs Downunder. Australian Natural History 25 (2) 30-39.
262.       LONG, J.A. 1993. Fabulous fish fossils of Gogo. Western Fisheries, Perth. W.A.. Autumn issue, pp 52-53.
263.       LONG, J.A. 1993.. Ferocious fishes- giants of the seas. Dinonews 6: 20-22.
264.       LONG, J.A. 1993. Fabulous fish fossils of Gogo. Western Fisheries, Autumn 1993, Perth. W.A.. 26-27.
265.       LONG, J.A. 1993. Fishes - a fascinating 500 million years of evolution. Western Fisheries, Winter 1993, 44-49. Perth. W.A..
266.       LONG. J.A. 1993. Killers from the dawn of time. Western Fisheries, Spring 1993, 37-41. Perth. W.A..
267.       LONG, J.A. 1993. Extraordinary finds from Western Australia. Australian Natural History, Quips, Quotes and Curios, 24 (7) 6-7.
268.       LONG, J.A. 1994. The Actinopterygii -a winning formula. Western Fisheries, Summer 1993-94, 40-45. Perth. W.A..
269.       LONG, J.A. 1995. New predatory dinosaurs from the Jurassic of China. Dinonews 8: 6-7.
270.       LONG, J.A. 1995. The oldest known segnosaur- Alxasaurus. Dinonews 8: 8.
271.       LONG, J.A. 1996. Giant carnivorous dinosaurs- is T. rex, the king, losing his crown? Dinonews 10: 5-8.
272.       LONG, J.A. 1996. Dinofest 2, Tempe, Arizona 1996. Dinonews 10: 16-17.
273.       LONG, J.A.1996. Move over Eric, its Clem! The first partial skeleton of a Mesozoic reptile described from Western Australia. Dinonews 10: 22.
274.       LONG, J. 1997. Dinosaur News. Dinonews 11: 3.
275.       MCNAMARA, K. and LONG, J. 1997. Why did dinosaurs grow so big? Dinonews 11: 4-9.
276.       LONG, J.A. 1998. Keeper series on ‘Dinosaurs of Australia’. (articles published every Monday in The West Australian newspaper (Feb-April 1998) in Earth 2000 supplement.
277.       LONG, J.A. 1999. Prehistoric sea-monsters of the West. Nature, Australia 26 (6): 46-53.
278.       LONG, J.A.. 2000. Old Fossils Windjana Gorge National Park. Landscope 16 (1) 28-35
279.       LONG, J.A. 2001. Dinosaurs of darkness. Tracks, summer 2001-2002: 8-10.
280.       LONG, J.A. 2001. Dinosaurs of Darkness exhibition. Dinonews 17: 3-4.
281.       LONG, J.A. 2001. Antarctic dinosaurs. Dinonews 17: 14-1.
282.       LONG, J.A. 2002. John’s Journal. Dinosaurs of the Morrison Formation. Dinonews 18:15-16.
283.       LONG, J.A. 2003. Operation Leo. Tracks, Summer 2003: 23
284.       LONG, J.A. 2003. When giants roamed Western Australia, Landscope Autumn 2003: 21-27.
285.       LONG, J.A. 2004. Vanished Giants of Western Australia. Riversleigh Notes 57: 2-10. Riversleigh Society, NSW.
286.       LONG, J.A. 2005a. Meet the Ancestors. Australasian Science 26 (3): 18-23.
287.       LONG, J.A, 2005b. The Eyes of Time. Australasian Science 26 (5): 26-27.
288.       LONG, J.A. 2008. Mother Fossil. Australasian Science 29 (6):16-18.
289.       LONG, J. 2010. Once Upon an Ancient Reef.   Science 329: 35-36.
290.       LONG.J.A. 2011. The Dawn of the Deed. Scientific American (cover story, January issue ), 34-39
291.       LONG, J.A. 2013 (Jan. 1st). The Scientist magazine (USA), invited essay on origins of sex: http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/33762/title/Sex-and-the-Primordial-Ooze/ Vol 27, 1:
292.       LONG, J.A. 2013. The Conversation https://theconversation.com/extraordinary-missing-link-fossil-fish-found-in-china-18461. (By J.Long, about a major paper in Nature on placoderm evolution;14,656 hits)
293.       LONG, J.A. 2013. The Conversation https://theconversation.com/big-bang-theory-how-did-dinosaurs-have-sex-15957 (by J.Long, on dinosaur reproduction, 15th July, 2013; 10,883 hits)
294.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The Conversation https://theconversation.com/now-listen-air-breathing-fish-gave-humans-the-ability-to-hear-21324 (by J.Long, about my Nature Communications paper published. Jan 23rd; 21,067 hits).
295.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The Conversation https://theconversation.com/hello-fish-face-a-fossil-fish-reveals-the-origins-of-the-face-22976. (by J.Long, Feb13th, on the evolution of the vertebrate face, based on a paper in Nature).
296.       LONG., J.A. 2014. The Conversation (June 9th) https://theconversation.com/the-first-vertebrate-sexual-organs-evolved-as-an-extra-pair-of-legs-27578 (8000 hits)
297.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The Conversation (June14th) https://theconversation.com/the-oldest-fish-in-the-world-lived-500-million-years-ago-27710 (35,000 hits).
298.       LONG, J.A. 2014. Life on Earth favours Evolution over creationism. 11 Sept. The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/life-on-earth-still-favours-evolution-over-creationism-23419
299.       LONG, J.A. 2014. Copulate to populate: ancient Scottish fish did it sideways The Conversation, 20th October 2014. https://theconversation.com/copulate-to-populate-ancient-scottish-fish-did-it-sideways-30910
300.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The first breath. Australasian Science, April 2014, pp 16-17.
301.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The oldest fishes in the world. Australasian Science, April 2014, pp 16-17.
302.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The Fossil Files – Scans Reveal our Fishy Ancestry .Australasian Science, 35(4): p.4
303.       LONG, J.A. 2014. The Fossil Files –The Rise of Arthropods. Australasian Science, 35(5): p.41.
304.       LONG, J.A. 2014.The Fossil Files –World’s Oldest Sperm Found at Riversleigh. Australasian Science, 35(6): p.42
305.       LONG, J.A. 2014.The Fossil Files –The Placoderm Renaissance Australasian Science, 35(7): p.42
306.       LONG, J.A. 2014.The Fossil Files –The Cutting Edge of Palaeontology. Australasian Science, 35(8): p.42
307.       LONG, J.A. 2014.The Fossil Files –Celebrating our World Heritage Fossil Sites. Australasian Science, 35(9): p.42
308.       LONG, J.A. 2014.The Fossil Files –The mystery of Deinocheirus solved. Australasian Science, 35 (10):
309.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – The magic of finding fossils. Australasian Science, 36 (1): p.42
310.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – An amazing year of record-breaking fossil discoveries. Australasian Science, 36 (2): p.42
311.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – A Gold medal for the world’s oldest life. Australasian Science, 36 (3): p.42.
312.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – The Birth of Filter-Feeding Giants. Australasian Science, 36 (4): p.42
313.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files –Lessons from the Chinese Palaeontology Boom. Australasian Science, 36 (5): p.42
314.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – Developing Fossil Sites for Education and Employment. Australasian Science, 36 (6): p.43
315.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files –So You Wanna Become a Palaeontologist, Kid?. Australasian Science, 36 (7): p.43
316.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – Australian Needs More State Fossil Emblems. Australasian Science, 36 (8): p.43
317.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – Reflection on the Discovery of a new Fossil Human Species. Australasian Science, 36 (9): p.43
318.       LONG, J.A. 2015. The Fossil Files – A New Cause for Three Global mass Extinction Events. Australasian Science, 36 (10): p.43
319.       LONG, J. 2015. Creating dinosaurs: why Jurassic World could never work. April 14, 2015. https://theconversation.com/creating-dinosaurs-why-jurassic-world-could-never-work-35484
320.       LONG, J. & CHOO, B. 2015. A bizarre new flying dinosaur with bat-like wings and feathers. April 30, 2015. https://theconversation.com/a-bizarre-new-flying-dinosaur-with-bat-like-wings-and-feathers-40366
321.       LONG, J. 2015. No bones about it: sharks evolved cartilage for a reason. May 29, 2015. https://theconversation.com/no-bones-about-it-sharks-evolved-cartilage-for-a-reason-42258
322.       LONG, J. & ROBINSON, H. 2015. Jurassic World: if you make a monster it will always bite back. June 11, 2015. https://theconversation.com/jurassic-world-if-you-make-a-monster-it-will-always-bite-back-42481
323.       LONG, J. 2015. Plate tectonics may have driven the evolution of life on Earth. July16, 2015. https://theconversation.com/plate-tectonics-may-have-driven-the-evolution-of-life-on-earth-44571
324.       LONG, J. 2015. We need protect the fossil heritage on our doorstep. July 27, 2015. https://theconversation.com/we-need-to-protect-the-fossil-heritage-on-our-doorstep-42263
325.       LONG, J. 2015. Australia needs more state fossil emblems, but let the public decide. Sept 8, 2015. https://theconversation.com/australia-needs-more-state-fossil-emblems-but-let-the-public-decide-46930
326.       LONG, J. & LARGE, R. 2015.Elementary new theory on mass extinctions that wiped out life. Nov 5, 2015. https://theconversation.com/elementary-new-theory-on-mass-extinctions-that-wiped-out-life-48806
327.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files –Delving into Dinosaur Body Temperatures. Australasian Science, 37 (1): p.43
328.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – Solving the Mysteries of the Australian megafauna. Australasian Science, 37 (2): p.43
329.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – The Rise of High-Tech Palaoentology. Australasian Science, 37 (3): p.43
330.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – When Will Australia Get Its First Real Mounted Dinosaur? Australasian Science, 37 (4): p.43
331.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – The Heart of a Good Fossil. Australasian Science, 37 (5): p.43
332.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – The Best of Australian Palaeontology on Show. Australasian Science, 37 (6): p.43
333.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – Fossil Sites Can Co-exist with Tourism. Australasian Science, 37 (7): p.43
334.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – Footprints in Time. Australasian Science, 37 (8): p.43
335.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files –Explorer’s Tragic Burden Transformed Geology. Australasian Science, 37 (9): p.43
336.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – Footprints in Time. Australasian Science, 37 (8): p.43
337.       LONG, J.A. 2016. The Fossil Files – Finding Frozen Fossils in Antarctica. Australasian Science, 37 (10): p.43
338.       LONG, J. 2016. Giant monster Megalodon sharks lurking in our oceans: be serious! Jan 25, 2016. https://theconversation.com/giant-monster-megalodon-sharks-lurking-in-our-oceans-be-serious-53164 (over 600,000 hits).
339.       LONG, J. 2016. The first fossilised heart ever found in a prehistoric animal. Apr. 20, 2016. https://theconversation.com/the-first-fossilised-heart-ever-found-in-a-prehistoric-animal-57204
340.       LONG, J. 2016. Coal’s formation is a window on an ancient world. June 8, 2016. https://theconversation.com/coals-formation-is-a-window-on-an-ancient-world-54333
341.       CLEMENT, A., & LONG, J. 2016. A new brain warp technique that helps to reconstruct fossil brains. July 21st 2016. https://theconversation.com/a-new-brain-warp-technique-that-helps-to-reconstruct-fossil-brains-61423
342.       LONG, J. 2016. Chew on this: we finally know how jaws evolved. Oct 21st 2016. https://theconversation.com/chew-on-this-we-finally-know-how-our-jaws-evolved-64559
343.       KING, B., LONG, J.A. & LEE, M.S.Y. 2016. Our ideas about vertebrate evolution challenged by anew tree of life. Dec. 6, 2016. https://theconversation.com/our-ideas-about-vertebrate-evolution-challenged-by-a-new-tree-of-life-68416
344.       LONG. J. 2017. Getting a job in palaeontology in Australia. Australasian Science 38 (2): 43.
345.       LONG, J. 2017. The Fossil File –Getting a Palaeontology Job in Australia. Australasian Science, 38 (2): p.43.
346.       LONG. J. 2017. The amazing dinosaur tracks of Broome Australasian Science 38 (3): 43.
347.       LONG, J. 2017. Gliding Jurassic mammals, huge dinosaurs and Ice Age birds. Australasian Science 38 (5): 41.
348.       LONG, J. 2017. The eyes have it: how vision may have driven fishes onto land. March 8th 2017. https://theconverstaion.com/the-eyes-have-it-how-vision-may-have-driven-fishes onto land-73060
349.       LONG, J.A. 2017. Dinosaur embryo returned to China, but many fossils fall victim to illegal trade and poor protection. May22, 2017. https://theconversation.com/dinosaur-embryo-returned-to-china-but-many-fossils-fall-victim-to-illegal-trade-and-poor-protection-77349
350.       LONG, JA. 2017. Ken Campbell-The Palaeontologist whose name live son in many fossils. The Conversation, June 26, 2017. https://theconversation.com/ken-campbell-the-palaeontologist-whose-name-lives-on-in-many-fossils-79668
351.       KING, B., LONG, J.A. 2018. The shocking facts revealed: how sharks and other animals evolved electroreception. Feb 13, 2018. https://theconversation.com/the-shocking-facts-revealed-how-sharks-and-other-animals-evolved-electroreception-to-find-their-prey-91066
352.       LONG, J. 2017. When palaeontology and philosophy meet. Australasian Science 38 (6): 41.
353.       LONG, J. 2018. Fossil treasures in urban Australia. Australasian Science 39 (1): 41.
354.       CLEMENT, A. & LONG, J.A. 2018. It’s less than 2 cm long, but this 400 million year old fossil fish changes our view of vertebrate evolution. May 30, 2018. https://theconversation.com/its-less-than-2cm-long-but-this-400-million-year-old-fossil-fish-changes-our-view-of-vertebrate-evolution-96419
355.       LONG, J.A & ROBINSON, H.L. 2018. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom where new dinosaurs emerge but who are the real monsters? June 15, 2018. https://theconversation.com/jurassic-world-fallen-kingdom-where-new-dinosaurs-emerge-but-who-are-the-real-monsters-978652018
356.       LONG, J.A. & CHEVRINAIS, M. 2018. The origins of those sexual organs: a fishy tale more primitive than we thought. https://theconversation.com/the-origins-of-those-sexual-organs-a-fishy-tale-much-more-primitive-than-we-thought-99675
357.       LONG, J.A. 2018. The rise of spiders and roaches. The Fossil File, Australasian Science, 39 (2): 41.
358.       LONG, J. 2018. Dinosaurs should rock older students too. The Fossil File, Australasian Science 39 (3): 41.
359.       LONG, J.A. 2018. The oldest lizards, salty amphibians and dandruffy dinosaurs. The Fossil File, Australasian Science, 39 (4): 41.
360.       LONG, J. 2018. Curious Kids. How Many dinosaurs where there. The Conversation series for children. https://theconversation.com/curious-kids-how-many-dinosaurs-in-total-lived-on-earth-during-all-periods-100460
361.       LONG ,J.A. 2018. https://theconversation.com/ancient-fish-evolved-in-shallow-seas-the-very-places-humans-threaten-today-105386 (Oct 26th 2018)
362.       LONG, J.A. 2018. https://theconversation.com/what-evolution-and-motorcycles-have-in-common-lets-take-a-ride-across-australia-95880
363.       LONG JA, 2018. Kangaroo teeth tell their story of evolution. Australasian Science, 39 (6): 41.
364.       LONG, J.A. 2018. How palaeontology benefits Australia’s economic future. Australasian Science, 39 (5): 41.
365.       LONG, J.A. 2018. Ancient fihs evolved in shallow seas -the veruy places humans threaten today. https://theconversation.com/ancient-fish-evolved-in-shallow-seas-the-very-places-humans-threaten-today-105386
366.       DUTEL, H. & LONG, J. 2019. We scanned on eof our closest cousins, the colecanth, to learn how its brain grows. https://theconversation.com/we-scanned-one-of-our-closest-cousins-the-coelacanth-to-learn-how-its-brain-grows-115147
367.       DUTEL, H. & LONG, J. 2019. L’étrange cœlacanthe passé aux rayons X. https://theconversation.com/letrange-coelacanthe-passe-aux-rayons-x-115346.
368.       LONG, J. & CLOUTIER, R. 2020. When fish gave us the finger: this ancient four-limbed fish revals theorigin of the human hand. https://theconversation.com/when-fish-gave-us-the-finger-this-ancient-four-limbed-fish-reveals-the-origins-of-the-human-hand-129072
369.       CLOUTIER, R. & LONG, J.A. 2020. Un fossile vieux de 380 millions d'années révèle l'origine de nos mains. https://theconversation.com/un-fossile-vieux-de-380-millions-dannees-revele-lorigine-de-nos-mains-130363
370.       LONG, J.A. & CLOUTIER, R. 2020. The unexpected origin of fingers. Scientific American 322 (6): 346-353.
371.       CLOUTIER, R., LONG, J. A.., CLEMENT, A. M. (submitted). L’origine évolutive des doigts. Médecine/Sciences. [French].