References: Y
References listed alphabetically
Yakolev, N N (1903) Ueber Plesiosaurus-Reste aus der Wolga-Stufe an der Lena in Sibirien; Zapiski Vserossiuskoe Mineralogicheskoe Obshchestva, 39, pp.34
Yeh ((date unknown)) Sinopliosaurus fusuiensis;
Young, C.-C. ((date unknown)) Plesiosaur remains discovered in Dsungar Basin, Sinking.; Memoirs of the Institute of Vertebrate Palaeontology and Paleoanthropology, Academia Sincia, No. II. Reports of Paleontological,
Young, C.-C. (1942) Fossil Vertebrates from Kuangyuan, N.Szechuan, China.; Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, XXII(3-4), pp.293-309
Young, C.-C. (1944) Sinopliosaurus weiyuanensis;
Young, C.-C. (1958) On the New Pachypleurosauroidea from Keichow, South-west China; Vertebrata PalAsiatica, 2(2), pp.69-82
Young, C.-C. (1959) Chinese Vertebrate Palaeontology since the Liberation; Scientia Sinica, VIII(10), pp.1153-1160
Young, C.-C. (1959) On a new Nothosauria from the Lower Triassic beds of Kwangsi; Vertebrata PalAsiatica, 3(2), pp.71-78.
Young, C.-C. (1960) New Localities of Sauropterigians in China; Vertebrata PalAsiatica, 4(2), pp.82-85.
Young, C.-C. (1971) P.weiyuanensis;
Young, C.-C. and Chow (1956) Latest Discoveries in Vertebrate Palaeontology in China; Sci. Sincia, 5(3), pp.603-610
Young, C.-C. and Dong, Zhi-ming (1972) On the Triassic Aquatic Reptiles of China; Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese academy of Science, Memoir No. 9, pp.1-34
Young, G. (1820) Account of a singular fossil skeleton discovered at Whitby, in February 1819; Mem. Wernerian nat. hist. Soc., 3, pp.450-457
Young, G. (1825) Account of the fossil crocodile recently discovered in the Alum-Shale near Whitby; Edinb. New philos. Jl., 13, pp.76-81
Young, Mark D and Hannah, Michael J (2014) Dinoflagellate biostratigraphy of the vertebrate fossil-bearing Maungataniwha Sandstone, northwest Hawke's Bay, New Zealand; New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 53(1), pp.81-87
Young, Mark T et. al. (2009) The evolution of Metriorhynchoidea (mesoeucrocodylia, thalattosuchia): an integrated approach using geometric morphometrics, analysis of disparity, and biomechanics; Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society