Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Sandy M.S. McLachlan"'
Autor:
Sandy M.S. McLachlan
Publikováno v:
Palynology. 46:1-11
Phelodinium fensomei is a new species of organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst described from the Appian Way section of the Oyster Bay Formation, Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Phelodiniu...
Publikováno v:
Palynology. 43:669-689
Twenty-nine mudstone samples from coastal exposures of the upper Campanian Northumberland Formation on Hornby Island, British Columbia, Canada, have yielded diverse assemblages of exceptionally wel...
Publikováno v:
Marine Micropaleontology. 145:1-20
Thirty mudstone samples from coastal exposures of the Northumberland Formation on Hornby Island, British Columbia, Canada, yielded diverse dinoflagellate cyst and terrestrial sporomorph assemblages. A late Campanian age for the formation has been wel
Autor:
Vera Pospelova, Sandy M.S. McLachlan
Publikováno v:
Cretaceous Research. 126:104878
A conformable K/Pg boundary succession is reported for this first time in North America west of the Rocky Mountains and in the north-eastern Pacific based on biostratigraphic controls, occurring within the upper Maastrichtian–lower Selandian marine
Autor:
Sandy M.S. McLachlan, Vera Pospelova
Publikováno v:
Marine Micropaleontology. 168:102057
An analysis of calcareous dinoflagellate cysts has been carried out on sixteen samples from across the K/Pg boundary interval from Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 577 situated on Shatsky Rise in the western North Pacific. This is the first time that a
Publikováno v:
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 292:104452
Wall structure and process type have long been essential taxonomic characters used in generic and specific determinations among spiniferate gonyaulacacean dinoflagellate cysts. We observe solid to fully vesiculate wall structure as well as a range of
Publikováno v:
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE, Vol 12, Iss 12, p e0189473 (2017)
PLoS ONE, Vol 12, Iss 12, p e0189473 (2017)
Mesozoic bird fossils from the Pacific Coast of North America are rare, but small numbers are known from the Late Cretaceous aged sediments of Hornby Island, British Columbia. Most are unassociated fragments that offer little information, but additio