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Spatial and temporal palynological trends in marginal marine depositional system : Lajas Formation, Neuquén Basin, ArgentinaStukins, Stephen January 2011 (has links)
In order to better understand the relationship of tidally dominated depositional environments and their palynological assemblages, the Middle Jurassic sediments of the Lajas Formation, Neuquén Basin were examined. The ambition was to present models and trends which can be used for studies of other such deposits. In order to integrate the palynoassemblages with the environment of deposition, additional granulometric data and nutrient data from XRF analysis were used in combination with the palynology. A new method using correspondence analysis was used for understanding the palaeoecology and floral dynamics. An updated, dynamic model for the Middle Jurassic floral palaeoecology of the Neuquén Basin has been presented and the drivers of floral succession are interpreted as disturbance tolerance and substrate water content. Taphonomic expressions of seral groupings show that later seral stage community palynomorphs are preferentially deposited within or close to distributary systems, whereas earlier seral stage palynomorphs are preferentially deposited in environments of greater accommodation space, such as bayfills. Taphonomic signatures, using palaeoecological groupings provide trends in low (4th/5th) order cycles and lateral variations relating to tidal channels and surrounding bayfill mudstones. A model for 4th/5th order boundaries is also presented using new interpretations of the distribution of pinaceous pollen and microforaminiferal test linings. Using Canonical Correspondence Ananlysis (CCA), a model is presented of depositional environments incorporating palynological data and granulometric proxies for grain size and grain sorting. The relationship between sediment processes in a tidal flat dominated palaeoenvironment and the hydrodynamic properties of some palynomorphs is investigated and presented. The weathering and nutrient status of the substrates throughout the Lajas Formation is presented using XRF proxy data. The proxies are also used with CCA to create nutrient related floral groupings. When plotted stratigraphically, these show cycles of eutrophication and subsequent weathering of the substrates.
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Cenozoic sedimentary evolution of the Helmville Basin, west-central MontanaMcCune, Julian Glenn. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Montana, 2008. / Title from title screen. Description based on contents viewed Aug. 20, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 43-49).
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Contrasting depositional environments of North American black shales illuminated through geochemical techniques and modern analogs /Kerns, Jessica L. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2004. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 22-25). Also available on the Internet.
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Holocene fire history of the southeast Yukon Territory /Pellow, Sonia Marie, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--Carleton University, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 84-90). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Contrasting depositional environments of North American black shales illuminated through geochemical techniques and modern analogsKerns, Jessica L. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 2004. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 22-25). Also available on the Internet.
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Biogeografie, fylogeneze, ekologie a systematika blešivců povrchových vod Karpat a jejich okolí / Biogeography, phylogeny, ecology and systematics of epigean freshwater Amphipoda in the Carpathian arc and beyondCopilas-Ciocianu, Denis January 2017 (has links)
3 ABSTRACT Freshwateramphipodsarepoordispersersduetothefragmentarynatureoftheir habitat,benthiclife-styleandlackofresistantpropagules.Consequently,mostspeciesare narrowlyendemic,andwidespreadmorphospeciesconsistofnumerousdivergentlineages. Assuch,thesepatternsareconsideredrelict, mainlyreflectinghistoricalratherthan contemporaryfactors.TheCarpathian Mountainsunderwentadramaticgeomorphological evolutionduringthelast20millionyears,risingfromtheParatethysSeathroughaseriesof islandsthateventuallycoalescedintooneofthelongest mountainchainsinEurope. Moreover,these mountainsandsurroundingbasinsareinhabitedbyaubiquitousand diverseamphipodfauna,providinganidealsettingfortestinghistoricalbiogeographical hypotheses.OurresultshaveshownthatinthesouthernhalfoftheCarpathians,montane Gammarus taxadisplayfragmentedandallopatricdistributionpatterns whilelowland speciesbelongingtothegeneraNiphargus andSynurella are mostlysympatricand widespreadoverlargedistances.Subsequent molecularinvestigationsrevealedthatthe patchydistributionofG.fossaruminthewesternandsouthwesternCarpathianshaslikely resultedfromthebreakupofaformerlycontiguouslandmass16 millionyearsago, suggestingthatgeologicalsubsidencecanplayanimportantroleinshapingbiogeographical patterns. Moreover,the WesternCarpathianlineagesineasternCzechiaandSlovakiaare...
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A 40,000-year record of vegetation and fire history from the Tate Vondo region, Northeastern Southpansberg, South Africa.Baboolal, Deeva Lata. 30 June 2014 (has links)
Records from the Quaternary period are used to confirm possible inferred climatic changes,
reveal the responses of species to these changes, and serve as an archive against which
modern environmental dynamics can be assessed. Fueled by a need to understand current
climatic changes, the call for palaeoclimatic research in the southern African subregion has
become more compelling. In southern Africa, such research has been largely restricted to
springs and swamps as the subregion lacks natural lakes, with some exception of a few
coastal lakes such as Lake Sibaya and Lake Eteza. Due to the arid and semi-arid landscapes
which prevail in southern Africa, there is a paucity of suitable sedimentary deposits in the
region. The highly organic peat deposit of Mutale Wetland, situated in the Tate Vondo region
of the northeastern Soutpansberg presents an ideal opportunity for conducting
palaeoenvironmental research. The Mutale Wetland contains relatively old sediments dating
back to >30,000 cal years BP, placing this record within the late Quaternary period.
Palaeoenvironmental techniques including radiocarbon, pollen and charcoal analyses were
applied to produce a palaeoenvironmental reconstruction for Tate Vondo. A 302 cm
sedimentary core was extracted from the Mutale Wetland. Detailed analyses show that prior
to ca. 34,000 cal yr BP, conditions were fairly warm and dry. This is inferred from a
dominance of open grassland vegetation. An expansion of Podocarpus forests together with
an increase in fynbos elements suggest a shift to cool, subhumid conditions during the LGM.
Cooler conditions persisted until ca. 12,000 cal yr BP. Thereafter, a climatic amelioration
was experienced. The appearance of low charcoal concentrations throughout the late
Pleistocene suggests that fire was infrequent. Between ca. 4000 – 1500 cal yr BP, conditions
became warmer and drier, inferred from the development of arid savanna vegetation. The
sharp increase in charcoal after ca. 4000 cal yr BP, broadly coinciding with the arrival of the
first agriculturalists in the area, has implications for the history of human occupation in the
Soutpansberg rather than shifts in climate. The succession from savanna to fynbos vegetation
together with expanded forests implies a return to cool and moist conditions from ca. 1500 –
400 cal yr BP. Arid savanna persists from ca. 400 to the present, implying warmer and drier
conditions towards the present day. Furthermore, from ca. 400 cal yr BP, the pollen and
charcoal record indicate that the majority of recent changes in vegetation have been driven by
anthropogenic activity. This record has contributed to an improved understanding of late
Quaternary changes in climate, vegetation history and human impact in the northeastern
Soutpansberg. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2014.
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Tectonostratigraphic evolution of the northeastern Maturin foreland basin, VenezuelaTaboada, Gustavo Adolfo 2009 August 1900 (has links)
The study uses subsidence analysis of three deep wells to basement combined with sequence stratigraphic mapping to show that a 85,000 km² area of the Eastern Venezuelan foreland basin in the region of the Orinoco Delta underwent three main stages of foreland-related subsidence that followed a protracted Cretaceous - late Oligocene period of precollisional, passive margin formation. Phase 1 consists of increased foreland basin subsidence in the late Oligocene to middle Miocene (23 - 13 Ma) at average sedimentation rates of 0.14 mm/yr. Clastic rocks of Phase 1 include the Freites Formation, a 1.2 km-thick section of greenish-gray fissile shale and shaly sandstone deposited in shallow marine- neritic environments. Seismic facies show progradation of Phase 1 clastic rocks as a wedge from the NE and NNE. Clastic rocks deposited during the accelerated Phase 2 in the middle to late Miocene (13 -11 Ma at sedimentation rates of 1.45 mm/yr) include the La Pica Formation, a 2.7 km-thick section of gray silt and fine-grained sandstone deposited in shallow marine/coastal proximal environments. Seismic facies show progradation of Phase 2 clastic rocks as a wedge to the northeast. Phase 3 consists of decelerating foreland basin subsidence in the period of late Miocene-mid Pliocene (11-6 Ma at average sedimentation rates of 0.86 mm/yr). Sedimentary rocks deposited during this period include the Las Piedras Formation, a 1.45 km-thick section of sandstone, carbonaceous siltstone and shale deposited in deltaic environments. Seismic facies show a progradation of Phase 3 clastic rocks as a wedge to the northeast and east-northeast. Deeper marine environments and more rapid subsidence rates of Phases 1 and 2 are interpreted as an underfilled foreland basin controlled by active thrusting along the Serrania del Interior at the northern flank of the basin. Deltaic environments and slower rates of Phase 3 are interpreted as an overfilled foreland related to rapid seaward progradation of the Orinoco Delta and its filling of the former, dynamically- maintained interior seaway. Paleogeographic maps constrained by wells and seismic lines show a large regression of the Orinoco River towards the west across the Columbus basin and Eastern Venezuelan basin during the late Miocene and the Paleocene. In this foreland basin setting, the effects of thrust-related tectonic subsidence and early deposition of the Orinoco Delta play a larger role in the early Miocene-Pleistocene sequences than eustatic effects. / text
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Middle Triassic mixosaurid ichthyosaurs from SW ChinaLiu, Jun, 刘俊 January 2011 (has links)
Mixosaurid ichthyosaurs (mixosaurs) are a dominant group of Middle
Triassic marine reptiles that was widely distributed in both Tethyan and
Panthalassic terranes. They are represented by many excellently preserved
specimens from all around the world and have been studied for more than one
hundred years. Even so, their morphology is not adequately known. The
systematics of mixosaurs is not well understood and their phylogeny has been
controversial. The nomination of several Chinese mixosaurs makes the situation
even worse. This thesis aims to provide a comprehensive review of Chinese
mixosaurs and discuss their phylogenetic relationships.
The detailed anatomy of only valid Chinese mixosaurid species Mixosaurus
panxianensis is well established in this thesis. Its ontogenetic changes are also
noted and a better diagnosis is given. A new morphotype of mixosaurs from a
recently discovered fossil Lagerst?tte, the Luoping biota, is described in detail.
This morphotype is similar to M. panxianensis but consistent differences are also
present. The ecological comparison to M. panxianensis demonstrates that this
morphotype represents a new taxon that is different from M. panxianensis. A
nearly complete and articulated specimen of Phalarodon atavus from the Middle
Triassic Luoping biota, Yunnan, South China is described. This is the first
specimen of P. atavus discovered outside the Germanic Basin. The discovery of
this specimen demonstrates a cosmopolitan distribution of P. atavus across the
whole Tethyan ocean. The new specimen is also the first one preserving the
postcranial anatomy of this species, providing the potential to evaluate its
swimming ability for the first time. Functional morphology shows that this
species is well adapted for a pursuit attack of prey, consistent with the
distribution pattern of the species. Tooth crown morphology suggests that P.
atavus may prefer externally soft prey such as belemnoids.
Mixosaurs are divided into three ontogenetic stages based on the humeral
morphology. The juvenile stage is characterized by a textured dorsal humeral
shaft surface. The subadult stage is characterized by a smooth humeral shaft in
dorsal view with a rugose humeral head. The adult stage is characterized by a
smooth humeral head. The consistent presence of the surface texture of ventral
humeral shaft is most probably caused by the strong muscle insertion presumably
related to the function of steering of the fore fins in mixosaurs.
Five morphotypes of Chinese mixosaurs are recognized in this study.
Twenty-five more or less new characters are introduced to evaluate the
phylogenetic relationships of mixosaurian-like specimens from China. The
monophyly of mixosaurs including all studied Chinese morphotypes is well
corroborated. Further investigation on the mixosaurs from Monte San Giorgio is
recommended to resolve the phylogenetic relationships of mixosaurs. / published_or_final_version / Earth Sciences / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Reconsidering the paleorange of Fagus grandifoliaMarkley, Stephen P., Cowell, Charles Mark, January 2009 (has links)
The entire thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file; a non-technical public abstract appears in the public.pdf file. Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on December 29, 2009). Thesis advisor: Dr. C. Mark Cowell. Includes bibliographical references.
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