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- 1.
The molecular basis of tooth induction, which is now quite well understood, is outside the scope of this review; for summaries see Järvinen et al. (2006), Mitsiadis and Smith (2006), Kettunen et al. (2007), and Pummila et al. (2007).
- 2.
See Lumsden (1988), Imai et al. (1996), and Hall (2005b*) for the origin of odontoblast precursors in the NC and for patterning of teeth by oral ectoderm.
- 3.
For the earliest chordate skeletal remains, see M. M. Smith and Hall (1990, 1993) and Sansom et al. (1994, 1996, 1997) See Sansom et al. (1992) and Donoghue (1998) for the histology and growth of conodont elements. See Donoghue et al. (2000) and Donoghue (2002) for conodont elements and the conodont animal.
- 4.
Aldridge and Donoghue (1998) and Janvier (1996, 2007) summarize the evidence for relationships between conodonts and hagfish and/or lampreys, concluding that placing conodonts as a sister group to lampreys best fitted the data available.
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Hall, B.K. (2009). Teeth and Hearts: The Odontogenic and Cardiac Neural Crests. In: Hall, B.K. (eds) The Neural Crest and Neural Crest Cells in Vertebrate Development and Evolution. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-09846-3_8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-09846-3_8
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