Results 131 to 140 of about 1,568 (161)
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Albian Foraminifera of the Rumanian Plain
Micropaleontology, 1965Describes foraminifera (including one new species and new subspecies) from marly Albian (Cretaceous) deposits of the Giurgiu and Putineiu regions. Tabulated data on biozonal distribution of the fauna are included.
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Additional Aptian–Albian ammonoids from Patagonia
Cretaceous Research, 2018Abstract Late Aptian – early Albian ammonoids of southern Patagonia are described. They are represented by Carinophylloceras collignoni Klinger, Wiedmann and Kennedy, Phyllopachyceras reymenti sp. nov., Tetragonites heterosulcatus Anthula, Anagaudryceras sacya (Forbes), Puzosia cf.
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Albian Foraminifera of the Yukon Territory
1978The results of this study provide a foraminiferal reference sequence for the Albian Stage in the Yukon Territory, a previously little-known region between the Alaskan North Slope and the Canadian Western Interior. Eighteen families, forty-three genera, and one hundred and thirty-five species of the order Foraminifera are reported from the Albian ...
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The Albian-Cenomanian boundary in northern California
Geological Society of America Bulletin, 1996There is no internationally agreed-upon stratotype for the Albian-Cenomanian (Lower Cretaceous–Upper Cretaceous) boundary. Type sections in France for the Albian and Cenomanian Stages are inadequate for this purpose. The proposed boundary stratotype sections in North Africa and Texas that were discussed in Copenhagen at the 1983 Third International ...
Michael A. Murphy, Peter U. Rodda
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Radiolarian paleobiogeography in the late Albian–Santonian
Stratigraphy and Geological Correlation, 2016Radiolarian paleobiogeography for the late Albian–Santonian is proposed for the first time. The paleobiogeographic differentiation is found to be different for the Albian, Cenomanian, Turonian, and Coniacian–Santonian. The Tethyan and Boreal superrealms can be recognized for the Albian–Santonian.
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ALBIAN LITHOFACIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN CISCAUCASUS
International Geology Review, 1964To aid in the search for hydrocarbons a study was made of the lithology and physical properties of Mesozoic sedimentary rocks in central and eastern Ciscaucasus. Of these, the Albian is most interesting because of production in the fields of northern Ciscaucasus. In central and eastern Ciscaucasus, Albian deposits are largely terrigenous.
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ALBIAN CAPRINID RUDISTS FROM TEXAS RE-EVALUATED
Journal of Paleontology, 2002Of the 33 caprinid rudist taxa reported from Albian strata in North America, only eighteen can be recognized unequivocally because many of the earlier named species were based on incomplete, altered, and poorly described specimens that do not meet rigorous criteria of modern rudist taxonomy.
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Aptian-Albian palaeogeography of Neo-Tethyan domain
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 1991Abstract The Aptian-Albian interval (124.5-97.0 Ma) was a critical time both globally and for the Tethyan domain. In the Tethyan domain it was the time when a united Neo-Tethyan subduction zone became established between the future site of the Alps and Southeast Asia and greatly accelerated the rate of north-south convergence throughout the Tethyan ...
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Albian Microplankton from the Moesic Platform, Rumania
Micropaleontology, 1967The Albian organic microplankton of the Moesic platform is described for the first time. A total of 22 species of dinoflagellates and acritarchs, some of them accompanied by short taxonomic comments, are reported. Possibilities of stratigraphic utilization of the species and of correlation of similar species from Europe and Australia are pointed out.
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