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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Small mammal fossils from Neogene Siwalik deposits, Pakistan

Jacobs, Louis L. January 1977 (has links)
No description available.
22

Neogene planktonic foraminifera : studies on Indo-Pacific oceanic sections / by Robert S. Heath

Heath, Robert Sturm January 1979 (has links)
185 leaves : ill., photos., charts, graphs, 11 fold. charts in end pocket ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Geology, 1981
23

Neogene planktonic foraminifera : studies on Indo-Pacific oceanic sections / by Robert S. Heath

Heath, Robert Sturm January 1979 (has links)
185 leaves : ill., photos., charts, graphs, 11 fold. charts in end pocket ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Geology, 1981
24

Geological aspects of paleoseismicity and archaeosismology in the fluvial alluvial Rimac valley / Aspectos geológicos de paleosismicidad y arqueosismología en el valle fluvio-aluvial del Rímac

Jacay, Javier 10 April 2018 (has links)
The sedimentary fill of the Rimac River fluvial-alluvial plain (Upper Miocene-Quaternary) consists of a thick sequence of unconsolidated material that corresponds to fluvial deposits. A record of seismotectonic activity is presentedin the sedimentary levels of fine facie within numerous paleoseismic structures such as contoured layers, pseudonodules, load figures, and material injections. Additionally, wall inclination and collapse, as well as displacement and partialfracturing, and pavement deformation, etc. are observed in the pre-Hispanic buildings located on the fluvial-alluvial plain. These sedimentological and architectural observations illustrate the periodicity of seismic events in the largefluvial-alluvial plain of the Rimac River. / El relleno sedimentario de la llanura fluvio-aluvial del río Rímac (Mioceno Superior-Cuaternario) está compuesto por una gruesa secuencia de material inconsolidado que corresponde a depósitos de origen fluvial. Es en los niveles sedimentarios de facies finas, donde la actividad sismotectónica está presente mediante manifestaciones de numerosas estructuras de paleosismicidad, como capas contorneadas, pseudonódulos, figuras de carga e inyecciones de material. Asimismo, en las edificaciones prehispánicas localizadas sobre esta llanura fluvio-aluvial se observa inclinaciones y colapso de paredes, desplazamiento de bloques de los muros, fractura parcial de los muros, deformación de pavimentos, etc. Son estas observaciones sedimentológicas y arquitectónicas las que nos manifiestan la periodicidad de eventos sísmicos en la gran llanura fluvio-aluvial del Rímac.
25

Stratigraphy and facies of the Pliocene Mayrán Lacustrine Basin System, Northeast México

Amezcua Torres, Natalia January 2012 (has links)
Lake basins contain depositional systems whose stratigraphy and sedimentology are highly influenced by allogenic and authigenic processes. Identifying the relative roles of these controls is complicated in settings where both tectonic and climate influences control sediment inputs and accommodation availability. In order to identify how these controls may interact in carbonate lake basins the lacustrine Mayrán Formation, northeast México was investigated. The Mayrán Formation is well exposed and the strata geometries are well preserved. The necessary data needed to unravel these complexities was obtained using field based techniques (geological and structural mapping, sedimentary logging and sampling), combined with optical and electron optical microscopy, mineralogical (XRD), and geochemical (oxygen and carbon stable isotopes, total organic carbon [TOC], organic carbon isotopes, and U-Pb carbonate dating) techniques, to characterise the lake basins. These data reveal that the Mayrán Formation was deposited in four, northerly, down-stepping, broadly coeval, hydrologically linked, carbonate-dominated lake subbasins (the Mayrán Basin system), that formed at different elevations spanning ~500 m. Subbasin geomorphology was controlled by the inherited topography of the exhumed and eroded Parras foreland fold-and-thrust belt, as a result, the subbasins are compartmentalized by prominent sandstone ridges that form sills between subbasins. Sedimentary infill of the subbasins consists of a fluvio-lacustrine succession (carbonate and clastic) that overly an angular unconformity truncating the folded and faulted Cretaceous bedrock. Clastic sediments were preferentially trapped in the most proximal subbasin in the south, adjacent to the mountain front. In more distal settings to the north, carbonate production resulted in deposition of horizontally bedded lacustrine limestones with subordinated siliciclastics and evaporite minerals. Carbonate deposition occurred during overfilled to balance filled conditions. Prominent aggradational to progradational tufa clinoforms form at the spillover points between the subbasins, and interfinger up- and down-dip with the horizontally bedded lacustrine limestones. The tufas consist of steeply dipping clinoforms that prograde northwards. They formed by inorganic and biogenically mediated calcite precipitation as waters from the topographically upper lake overflowed the sill. U-Pb dating of speleothem cements formed in the tufas yield a Pliocene age (3.06 ± 0.2 Ma). The horizontally bedded limestones that predominantly fill the subbasins are composed of nine lithofacies. These are: ostracode mudstone-wackestone, clotted boundstone, gastropod wackestone-packstone, oncoid wackestone-packstone, stromatolite, charophyte wackestone-packstone, marlstones, crystalline carbonate and evaporite minerals. These lithofacies contain variable proportions of production-derived components, with subordinated detrital and diagenetic components. They overall contain inorganic and organic calcite (average 91%), organic matter (average 12.6 % TOC) and subordinated detrital quartz, feldspar and clay. Stable isotope conditions from stromatolite laminations (δ13C -6.3‰ and δ18O -8.0‰), and micritic matrix from samples in all the subbasins (δ13C -5.7‰ and δ18O -8.4‰), indicate that overall calcite deposition occurred in freshwater lakes, under predominantly oxic conditions. Carbonate particles deposited mainly by in situ disaggregation and by settling. Significant preservation of the organic matter likely occurred because of the fine grained carbonate matrix, and because of moderate rates of both carbonate sediment and organic matter production. Stacking patterns in the lake successions show an overall shallowing upward cyclicity. It is considered, that the effects of inherited basin geomorphology and climate, ultimately controlled facies variability and strata geometries in these subbasins.
26

First fossil record of Staphylea L. (Staphyleaceae) from North America, and its biogeographic implications

Huang, Yong Jiang, Liu, Yu Sheng, Wen, Jun, Quan, Cheng 01 November 2015 (has links)
The occurrences of Staphylea L. (Staphyleaceae) fossils have been abundantly documented from the Cenozoic of Eurasia, but none has been confirmed from North America to date. In this study, we describe Staphylealevisemia sp. nov. on the basis of seed remains from the latest Miocene to earliest Pliocene of northeastern Tennessee, southeastern USA. The seeds are characterized by a smoothly inflated body, a large hilar scar perforated by several vascular traces and bordered by a distinctive lip-like rim, a cuticle coating the seed coat interior, and seed coat section containing weakly developed tiny lumina. According to the paleogeographic distribution of the genus, it is hypothesized that Staphylea originated from western Eurasia no later than the late Oligocene, and arrived in eastern North America no later than the late Neogene, most possibly through the North Atlantic land bridges like many other seed plants.
27

Reconstructing Neogene Vegetation and Climates to Infer Tectonic Uplift in Western Yunnan, China

Sun, Bai Nian, Wu, Jing Yu, Liu, YuSheng Christopher, Ding, Su Ting, Li, Xiang Chuan, Xie, San Ping, Yan, De Fei, Lin, Zhi Cheng 01 May 2011 (has links)
Neogene climates and vegetation history of western Yunnan are reconstructed on the basis of known fossil plants using the Coexistence Approach (CA) and Leaf Margin Analysis (LMA). Four Neogene leaf floras from Tengchong, Jianchuan and Eryuan in southwestern China are analyzed by the CA, and the paleoclimatic data of one Miocene carpoflora from Longling and three Pliocene palynofloras from Longling, Yangyi and Eryuan are used for comparison. The Miocene vegetation of the whole of West Yunnan is subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest, and a similar mean annual precipitation is inferred for Tengchong, Longling and Jianchuan. However, by the Late Pliocene a large difference in vegetation occurred between the two slopes of Gaoligong Mountain, western Yunnan. The region of Tengchong retained a subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forest vegetation, whereas in Yangyi and Eryuan a vertical vegetation zonation had developed, which consists, in ascending order, of humid evergreen broad-leaved, needle and broad-leaved mixed evergreen, and coniferous forests. Distinctively, the Late Pliocene vegetational patterns of West Yunnan were already very similar to those of the present, and the Pliocene mean annual precipitation in Tengchong was markedly higher than that of Yangyi and Eryuan. Considering that the overall vegetation of West Yunnan and the precipitation at Yangyi and Eryuan have undergone no distinct change since the Late Pliocene, we conclude that the Hengduan Mountains on the northern boundary of West Yunnan must have arisen after the Miocene and approached their highest elevation before the Late Pliocene. Furthermore, the fact of the eastern portion of the Tibetan Plateau underwent a slight uplift after the Late Pliocene is also supported.
28

Sinomenium Macrocarpum sp. nov. (Menispermaceae) From the Miocene-Pliocene Transition of Gray, Northeast Tennessee, USA

Liu, Yu Sheng C., Jacques, Frédéric M. 01 February 2010 (has links)
The present study documents the first confirmed fossil record of Sinomenium in Menispermaceae, Sinomenium macrocarpum sp. nov., from the recently discovered Gray Fossil Site in Tennessee, southeastern USA. The fossil species is represented by more than 120 endocarps, all of which are characterized by their horseshoe-shaped form and occurrence of highly ornamented protuberances on both dorsal and lateral crests. A combination of their relatively large size and highly developed of protuberances on the surface of endocarp warrants the new species. The new species is justified through a detailed comparison with the related and published extant and fossil species. The discovery of the genus in North America appears to support that the Gray site in southern Appalachian region represented a forest refugium during the late Neogene when the global cooling was intensified and grasslands were globally expanded.
29

Late Neogene Paleoclimate and Paleoenvironment Reconstructions From the Pipe Creek Sinkhole, Indiana, USA

Shunk, Aaron J., Driese, Steven G., Farlow, James O., Zavada, Michael S., Zobaa, Mohamed K. 15 April 2009 (has links)
The Late Neogene represents warm Earth conditions immediately prior to the development of extensive northern hemisphere glaciation, and this period in Earth history may therefore provide the best available analog for the projected outcome of continued global warming. There are few interior continental sites of Late Neogene age from the eastern half of North America and subsequently very little is known about the conditions characterizing climate. The Early Pliocene (~ 5 Ma) Pipe Creek Sinkhole (PCS) includes the sediment fill of a complex karst environment that developed in north-central Indiana, USA (Lat. 40° 27′ 25.4″, Long. 85° 47′ 37.2″). The site includes more than 3 m of high-chroma, red-colored silty-clay sediment interpreted to be terra rossa. The terra rossa δ13C values average - 20 ± 0.7‰ PDB and are interpreted to represent sediment deposited in a closed cave system under high summer temperatures and with well-drained soils. An in-situ paleosol at the top of the terra rossa represents a transition from a closed cave to an open environment that eventually flooded, thereby becoming a small pond. δ13C values from lacustrine sediments with organic matter derived dominantly from algae average - 20.6‰ and suggest the pond was stagnant and enriched with bicarbonate from the underlying limestones or via aquifers. Pond sediments include abundant vertebrate fossils, which are broadly consistent with those inhabiting an open ecosystem such as a savannah or parkland. However, the PCS pollen includes low taxonomic diversity that is dominated by pine with some hickory and flowering plants, but no grass pollen. We propose two hypotheses to explain the PCS stratigraphic record: (1) The pollen assemblage may represent a local pine dominated ecosystem associated with the pond paleoenvironment, such as a riparian community, and that the greater landscape was drier and open; (2) Alternatively, the climate may have became wetter raising the elevation of the groundwater table and initiating the formation of the pond. Then in response to the wetter conditions an early succession forest ecosystem developed.
30

Neogene Forests From the Appalachians of Tennessee, USA: Geochemical Evidence From Fossil Mammal Teeth

DeSantis, Larisa, Wallace, Steven C. 27 August 2008 (has links)
Neogene land-mammal localities are very rare in the northeastern U.S.; therefore, the late Miocene/early Pliocene Gray Fossil Site in eastern Tennessee can clarify paleoecological dynamics during a time of dramatic global change. In particular, the identification of ancient forests and past climate regimes will better our understanding of the environmental context of mammalian evolution during the late Cenozoic. Stable isotope analyses of bulk and serial samples of fossil tooth enamel from all ungulates present at the Gray site elucidate paleoecological reconstructions. The herbivorous megafauna include taxa of likely North American and Eurasian ancestry including: the tapir Tapirus polkensis, rhino Teleoceras cf. T. hicksi, camel cf. Megatylopus sp., peccary Tayassuidae, and proboscidean Gomphotheriidae. The tapir, rhino, camel, and peccary yield mean stable carbon isotope (δ13C) tooth enamel values of - 13.0‰, - 13.3‰, - 13.8‰, and - 13.1‰, respectively, suggesting forest-dwelling browsers. This range of δ13C values indicates the presence of a C3 dominated ancient local flora. Because δ13C values decline with increasing canopy density, the ancient temperate forests from the Gray site were moderately dense. The lack of significant C4 plant consumption (i.e., tooth enamel δ13C values < - 9‰) suggests the presence of forests large enough to independently support the continued browsing of sustainable populations of browsers from the Gray site. In contrast, bulk and serial δ13C values ranging from - 0.7‰ to 0.3‰ from a gomphothere tusk support a diet consisting of C4 grasses, suggesting the presence of C4 grasslands within the individuals home range. The rare earth element (REE) analyses of the gomphothere tusk and the teeth of Tapirus and Teleoceras indicates that these individuals shared similar depositional environments; thus, demonstrating the concurrent presence of C3 forests and C4 grasslands in the northeast. Stable carbon and oxygen serial sample variation of the tapir, rhino, peccary, and gomphothere is less than 1.5‰, suggesting minor differences in seasonal temperature and/or precipitation. These data support the possibility of a North American forest refugium in the southern Appalachians during a time typified by more open environments.

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