[R] Chin
Chin, K. (1990). Possible herbivorous dinosaur coprolites from the Two Medicine Formation (Late Cretaceous) of Montana. J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 9(3), 17A
Chin, K., Brassell, S. and Harmon, R.J. (1991). Biochemical and petrographic analysis of a presumed dinosaurian coprolite from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation, Montana. J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 11(3), 22A
Chin, K. and Gill, B.D. (1993). Evidence for dinosaur/insect interactions in the Cretaceous (Campanian) Two Medicine Formation of Montana. J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 13(3), 29A
Chin, K. (1994) On the elusive trail of fossil dung. In: Dino Fest. Palaeontological Society Special Publication # 7:285-294
Chin, K. (1995). The paleobilogical implications of herbivorous dinosaur coprolite fabrics from the Two Medicine Formation, Montana. J. Vertebr. Paleontol. 15(Supp;. to No.3), 23A
Chin, K. (1995) Lessons from leavings. Natural History 104(6):67
Chin, K. and Gill, B.D. (1996). Dinosaurs, Dung Beetles, and Conifers: Participants in a Cretaceous Food Web. Palaios. 11: 280-285.
Chin, K., Tokaryk, T. T. and Erickson, G. M. (1996). Probable Tyrannosaurus rex coprolite from the Maastrichtian Frenchman Formation of Saskatchewan. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 16(3 Suppl.):27. New York, NY.
Chin, K. (1996) The paleobiological implications of herbivorous dinosaur coprolites: ichnologic, petrographic, and organic geochemical investigations. Ph.D. dissertation, Univ. California Santa Barbara, 162pp
Chin, K. (1997). Coprolites In Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs (J.Currie and K.Padian, Eds.), pp. 147-150 Academic Press, San Diego, California/London, UK
Chin, K. (1997) What did dinosaurs eat? Coprolites and other direct evidence of dinosaur diets. In. J.O. Farlow and M.K. Brett-Surman (eds.), The complete dinosaur, pp. 371-382. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Chin, K., Tokaryk, T.T. Erickson, G.M. & Calk, L.C. (1998). A king-sized theropod coprolite. Nature. 393: 680-682.
Chin, K. & Kirkland, J.I. (1998) Probable herbivore coprolites from the Upper Jurassic Mygatt-Moore Quarry, western Colorado. In : K. Carpenter, D.J. Chure, & J.I. Kirkland (eds.) The Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation: An Interdiscplinary Study, Modern Geology (Special Issue) , 23: 249-275
Chin, K. (2002) Analyses of coprolites produced by carnivorous vertebrates. In : M. Kowalewski and P. H. Kelley (eds.) The fossil record of predation. The Paleontological Society Papers 8 , The Paleontological Society: 43-50
Chin, K., Eberth, D.A., Schweitzer, M.H., Rando, T.A., Sloboda, W.J. and Horner, J.R.. (2003) Remarkable preservation of undigested muscle tissue within a Late Cretaceous Tyrannosaurid coprolite from Alberta, Canada. Palaios 18: 286–294.
Chin, K. (2007) The paleobiological implications of herbivorous dinosaur coprolites from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana: why eat wood? Palaios 22(5):554-566
Chin, K., and Bishop, J.R. (2008) Exploited twice: bored bone in a theropod coprolite from the Jurassic Morrison Formation of Utah, U.S.A.; pp. 379-387 in Bromley, R.G., Buatois, L.A., Mángano, G., Genise, J.F., and Melchor, R.N. (eds.), Sediment-organism Interactions: A Multifaceted Ichnology. SEPM Special Publication 88.
Chin, K., Hartman, J. H., and Roth, B. (2009) Opportunistic exploitation of dinosaur dung: fossil snails in coprolites from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana: Lethaia, v. 42, p. 185-198.