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Palynology and geophotometry of the Middle Cretaceous rocks in Ellsworth and Russell Counties, KansasSnyder, Donald Leroy. January 1963 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1963 S674 / Master of Science
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Upper Cretaceous Palynomorphs from Coal Canyon, Coconino County, ArizonaAgasie, John M. January 1967 (has links)
The coal-bearing Dakota Sandstone at Coal Canyon, Arizona, which is located in the western portion of the Black Mesa basin, has yielded abundant, diverse, and generally well-preserved spores, pollen, and microplankton. The formation is characterized by high frequencies of fern spores, especially striate spores belonging to the Schizaeaceae, and angiospermous pollen consisting primarily of simple tricolpate and tricolporate grains. Gymnospermous pollen is comparatively uncommon. The microflora assemblage contains many exclusively Cretaceous species previously reported from Australia, western Europe, Siberia, and other localities of North America. A microflora which compares closely with the Dakota assemblage occurs in the Woodbine strata of Oklahoma. On the basis of palynologic evidence, the age of the Dakota Sandstone at Coal Canyon, is interpreted as lowermost Upper Cretaceous (Cenomanian).
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Revision of the early Cretaceous flora from Hope Bay, AntarcticaGee, Carole T. 04 February 2013 (has links)
The Early Cretaceous (Berriasian) Hope Bay flora is one of the most diverse assemblages from the Mesozoic of Antarctica. Collected in 1902 by the Swedish Antarctic Expedition of 1901-1903 from Hope Bay at the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, and described in 1913 by T. G. Halle, it has served as a classic reference collection for Jurassic and Cretaceous southern hemisphere paleobotanical studies. Because the systematics of the flora were outdated by the enormous advances in our understanding of fossil plants during the last 70 years, it was in serious need of revision. This revision has reduced the number of taxa from 61 to 42 species. Newly erected species are Otozamites rowleyi, Kachchhia schopfii, Ticoa jeffersonii, and Araucaria antarctica. New combinations are Todites grahamii and Thinnfeldia salicifolia. The genera Kachchhia, Ticoa, and Weltrichia are new occurrences at Hope Bay. Represented in the flora are members of the Hepatophyta, Arthrophyta, Pteridophyta, Pteridospermophyta, Cycadophyta, Cycadeoidophyta, and Coniferophyta. Not surprisingly, when compared with other Gondwana floras, the Hope Bay flora shows the greatest similarity with other Antarctic floras. There is also a close affinity with the floras of South America and New Zealand. Taxonomic similarity between these floras is best explained by paleogeographic proximity. / text
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