Paleobotany
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(OCoLC)fst01051324
Label
Paleobotany
Name
Paleobotany
Source
fast
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- Species of Aquilapollenites and Fibulapollis from two Upper Cretaceous localities in Alaska, by Bernadine D. Tschudy
- Taxonomic revision of the Spermatopsida of the Oligocene Creede flora, southern Colorado, by Jack A. Wolfe and Howard E. Schorn
- The Tertiary floras of Alaska, by Arthur Hollick; with a chapter on The geology of the Tertiary deposits by Philip S. Smith
- An analysis of present-day terrestrial lapse rates in the western conterminous United States and their significance to paleoaltitudinal estimates, by Jack A. Wolfe
- Lower Pennsylvanian species of mariopteris, eremopteris, diplothmema, and aneimites from the Appalachian region, by David White; a posthumous work assembled and edited by Charles B. Read
- Illustrations of plant microfossils from the Yazoo Clay (Jackson Group, upper Eocene) Mississippi, by Robert H. Tschudy and Sharon D. Van Loenen
- A new Tolypella from the Ocean Point dinosaur locality, North Slope, Alaska, and the Late Cretaceous to Paleocene Nitelloid charophytes, by Monique Feist and Elisabeth Brouwers
- North American mesozoic charophyta, Raymond E. Peck
- American Cretaceous ferns of the genus Tempskya, by Charles B. Read and Roland W. Brown
- Miocene marine diatoms from the Kirkwood Formation, Atlantic County, New Jersey, by George W. Andrews
- Fossil flora of the John Day Basin, Oregon, by Frank Hall Knowlton. [U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin No. 204. Series C, Systematic Geology and Paleontology, 58.]
- Middle and Upper Eocene floras of southeastern North America by Edward Wilber Berry. [U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 92.]
- Geology and biology of North Atlantic deep-sea cores between Newfoundland and Ireland, by Willis L. Tressler, Part 4
- Plant spores and other microfossils from Upper Devonian and Lower Mississippian rocks of Ohio, by Marcia R. Winslow
- The Foerstia zone of the Ohio and Chattanooga shales, an explanation for the stratigraphic zonation of the fossils and a report on a newly discovered occurrence of the Foertia zone in western Ohio, by J.M. Schopf and J.F. Schwietering
- Paleogene biostratigraphy of nonmarine rocks in King County, Washington, by Jack A. Wolfe
- Geology and paleontology of the Judith river beds, by T.W. Stanton and J.B. Hatcher ; with a chapter on the fossil plants by F.H. Knowlton
- Oligocene marine diatoms recovered in dredge samples from the Navarin Basin Province, Bering Sea, by Jack G. Baldauf and John A. Barron
- Cenomanian angiosperm leaf megafossils, Dakota Formation, Rose Creek locality, Jefferson County, southeastern Nebraska, by Garland R. Upchurch, Jr., and David L. Dilcher
- Index of generic names of fossil plants, 1974-1978, by Arthur D. Watt
- Shorter contributions to general geology, 1922, [by] David White, chief geologist. [U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 131.]
- Tertiary plants from the Cook Inlet region, Alaska, by Jack A. Wolfe
- Palynostratigraphy in relation to sequence stratigraphy, Straight Cliffs Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Kaiparowits Plateau, Utah, by Douglas J. Nichols
- Ferns from the Chinle Formation (Upper Triassic) in the Fort Wingate area, New Mexico, by Sidney R. Ash
- Palmlike plants from the Dolores formation (Triassic), southwestern Colorado, by Roland W. Brown
- Two new pollen genera (Late Cretaceous and Paleocene) with possible affinity to the Illiciaceae, by Robert H. Tschudy; prepared in cooperation with the Kentucky Geological Survey
- Normapolles pollen from the Mississippi embayment, by Robert H. Tschudy; work done in cooperation with the Kentucky Geological Survey
- Additions to the flora of the Spotted Ridge Formation in central Oregon, by Sergius H. Mamay and Charles B. Read
- Flora of the outlying Carboniferous basins of southwestern Missouri, by David White
- Miocene pollen and spore flora of Eniwetok Atoll, Marshall Islands, by Estella B. Leopold
- Geology and biology of North Atlantic deep-sea cores between Newfoundland and Ireland, Harald A. Rehder, Austin H. Clark, and Lloyd G. Henbest, Parts 5, Part 6, Echinodermata, Part 7
- Fossil plants from the Colgate member of the Fox Hills sandstone and adjacent strata, by Roland W. Brown
- Flora of the Ripley formation, by Edward Wilver Berry. [U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 136.]
- Shorter contributions to general geology, 1919, David White, chief geologist
- Revisions of Ulmus and Zelkova in the Middle and Late Tertiary of western North America, by Toshimasa Tanai and Jack A. Wolfe
- Fossil wood and lignite of the Potomac formation, by Frank Hall Knowlton
- Complexiopollis pollen lineage in Mississippi embayment rocks, by Robert H. Tschudy; work done in cooperation with the Kentucky Geological Survey
- Cretaceous plants from southwestern Colorado, by Roland W. Brown
- Late quaternary glacial and vegetative history of the Glacier National Park region, Montana, by Paul E. Carrara
- A revision of the flora of the Latah formation, by Edward Wilber Berry
- Fossil and recent calcareous algae from Guam, by J. Harlan Johnson
- Supplement to catalogue of Mesozoic and Cenozoic plants of North America, 1919-37, by Robert Smith LaMotte
- The Laramie and the overlying Livingston formation in Montana, by Walter Harvey Weed, with report on flora, by Frank Hall Knowlton
- Additions to the Wilcox flora from Kentucky and Texas, by Edward W. Berry
- Stromatolites of the Belt Series in Glacier National Park and vicinity, Montana, by Richard Rezak
- Tertiary stratigraphy and paleobotany of the Cook Inlet region, Alaska, Jack A. Wolfe, D. M. Hopkins, and Estella B. Leopold
- Paleobotany and the evolution of plants, Wilson N. Stewart, Gar W. Rothwell
- Stratigraphic distribution of some pollen types from the Campanian and lower Maestrichtian rocks (Upper Cretaceous) of the Middle Atlantic States, by Jack A. Wolfe
- Index of generic names of fossil plants, 1966-1973, by Anna M. Blazer
- Late Quaternary vegetation history of the Yellowstone Lake Basin, Wyoming, by Richard G. Baker
Outgoing Resources
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