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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_TurtlesThe Turtles - Wikipedia

    History. 1963–1966: Formation, initial success and first personnel changes. The Nightriders, the Crossfires and the Tyrtles. In early 1963, New Yorker Howard Kaylan and Californian Mark Volman attended the same school, Westchester High in Los Angeles (Kaylan had moved from New York City as a child).

  2. Historia. Este grupo originalmente era una banda de surf rock llamada The Crossfires from the Planet Mars— fue fundada en 1965 en Westchester (un vecindario de Los Ángeles) por Howard Kaylan y Mark Volman.

  3. Many of the oldest and most primitive forms lacked a shell, plastron, and a carapace. The oldest sea turtle is known from the mid-Cretaceous. Although Odontochelys, Proganochelys, and Eunotosaurus offer insight into early anatomy, the origin of turtles remains highly debated.

  4. In a way, turtle evolution is an easy story to follow: the basic turtle body plan arose very early in the history of life (during the late Triassic period ), and has persisted pretty much unchanged down to the present day, with the usual variations in size, habitat, and ornamentation.

  5. The Turtles are an American rock band formed in Los Angeles, California in 1965, whose best-known lineup included Howard Kaylan, Mark Volman, Al Nichol, Chuck Portz, Jim Tucker and Don Murray. Originating from an earlier surf band called the Crossfires, the Turtles first achieved success with a sound that fused folk music with rock ...

  6. Background. Alan Gordon had served as the drummer and one of the primary songwriters of the Magicians, which had recently evolved from Tex & the Chex. He wrote and co-wrote a number of songs for the band, most famously "An Invitation to Cry" (with Jimmy Woods). Gordon already had many of the lyrics in mind for "Happy Together" but the chorus of the song came to him at the Park Street Diner in ...

  7. Just as plates formed before scutes in the evolutionary history of turtles, so they still do in modern turtle embryos. The evolution of their distinctive carapace was genetically regulated. In not proceeding to the final stage Odontochelys was an example of ‘paedomorphosis’ (Reisz & Head 2008), a common phenomenon in evolution.