INSECT FOSSILS FROM THE LATE PALEOCENE (BULLION CREEK FORMATION) OF WANNAGAN CREEK, NORTH DAKOTA

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott A. Haire ◽  
◽  
H. Douglas Hanks ◽  
Bruce R. Erickson
Palynology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reinhard Zetter ◽  
Michael J. Farabee ◽  
Kathleen B. Pigg ◽  
Steven R. Manchester ◽  
Melanie L. DeVore ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. 864-881 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard C. Fox

Re-examination of the dentitions of carpolestid plesiadapiform mammals from the late Paleocene Swan Hills locality, northern Alberta, and correlative localities in the vicinity of Roche Percée, southeastern Saskatchewan, Canada, indicates that Carpodaptes cygneus (Russell) as known from these sites is polyphyletic: the name C. cygneus is here restricted to the Swan Hills carpolestid, while the Roche Percée form represents a new, more derived species, Carpodaptes stonleyi. Other purported records of C. cygneus are reconsidered as well: C. cygneus from DW-1, central Alberta, is more appropriately dubbed C. cf. cygneus; C. cygneus at Canyon Ski Quarry, central Alberta, is best identified as C. cf. stonleyi, while C. cf. cygneus from Police Point, southeastern Alberta, has closest affinities to C. hazelae Simpson. Carpolestids from the Tongue River Formation, North Dakota, are referred to Carpodaptes cf. hobackensis Dorr and C. cf. hazelae. After a review of the available evidence, the recent hypothesis that C. cygneus and other North American carpolestids are congeneric with Carpocristes oriens Beard and Wang from the Paleocene or Eocene of China, is rejected.


1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (12) ◽  
pp. 2073-2084 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgia L Hoffman ◽  
Ruth A Stockey

The Joffre Bridge Roadcut locality (Paskapoo Formation) in south-central Alberta yields plant, mammal, fish, and insect fossils. A Late Paleocene (Tiffanian) age is indicated by mammalian fossils, supported by magnetostratigraphy and palynostratigraphy. This paper summarizes the flora (28 taxa have been identified to date) and describes the sedimentology to provide a paleoenvironmental context. Outcrops at the site are limited, but seven stratigraphic units are recognized and are interpreted to represent five environments of deposition: flood plain, fluvial channel, abandoned channel, swamp, and crevasse splay. The flood-plain mudstones lack identifiable plant material due to bioturbation and pedogenesis. They are capped by a thin, clay-rich paleosol with scattered vertebrate bones. An upward-fining sequence, interpreted as fluvial channel and channel abandonment sediments, rests directly on the paleosol and includes remains of riparian trees. Carbonaceous mudstone, interpreted as a swamp facies, includes remains of only five taxa (taxodiaceous conifers and riparian trees). Light-coloured mudstones on top of the swamp facies include a more diverse assemblage (aquatic and understory plants, taxodiaceous conifers, and riparian trees). Those beds are interpreted as the distal margin of an encroaching crevasse splay. Overlying sediments coarsen upward and are unfossiliferous, except for one occurrence of articulated fish skeletons from a mass-death event. The most productive beds for plant fossils are the top of the channel-abandonment sequence, the swamp horizon, and the base of the crevasse splay. Those beds have also yielded some insect, fish, and mammal remains.


2014 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven R. Manchester ◽  
Tatyana M. Kodrul

ABSTRACT Morphology and anatomy of the extinct angiosperm fruit, Porosia verrucosa (Lesqueruex) Hickey, are documented in detail based on various modes of preservation including molds, casts, and permineralizations from more than seventy localities in the late Cretaceous and Paleocene. The fruits are schizocarpic with paired unilocular, single-seeded mericarps seated on a prominent gynophore with an hypogynous perianth borne on a long pedicel. The most distinctive feature of these fruits is the regularly spaced cylindrical intrusions over the surface of the endocarp. These are interpreted to represent oil cavities similar to those common in the fruits of extant Rutaceae. The oldest known occurrences of P. verrucosa are from the Late Cretaceous (Campanian to Maastrichtian) of western North America, but the genus traversed Beringia and became widespread in the Paleocene both in Asia (Kazakhstan, Amur Region, and Koryak Highlands), and North America (Montana, North Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Oregon, Washington, Alberta, Saskatchewan). It extended to the late Paleocene in the Rocky Mountain and Great Plains region, and appears to have become extinct near the Paleocene-Eocene boundary.


2008 ◽  
Vol 169 (5) ◽  
pp. 687-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Benedict ◽  
Kathleen B. Pigg ◽  
Melanie L. DeVore
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 176 (9) ◽  
pp. 892-900 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefanie M. Ickert-Bond ◽  
Kathleen B. Pigg ◽  
Melanie L. DeVore
Keyword(s):  

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