Etude anatomique et paleogeographique de deux tiges de palmiers fossiles (Palmoxylon ligerinum Crie) recoltes aux environs de Savigne-sur-Lathan (Indre-et-Loire)

1949 ◽  
Vol S5-XIX (7-9) ◽  
pp. 601-609 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edouard Boureau
Keyword(s):  

Abstract Describes two specimens of mineralized plant stems collected in the vicinity of Savigne-sur-Lathan, Indre-et-Loire, France, which could definitely be assigned to Palmoxylon ligerinum. One was found in a loose block on the surface of beds attributed to the Bartonian (Eocene); the other is a reworked fragment found in Vindobonian (Miocene) deposits. Discussion of the affinities and stratigraphic distribution (upper Cretaceous?-Tertiary) of P. ligerinum is included.

2011 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 234-249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dirk Fuchs ◽  
Neal Larson

Morphologic analyses of a large collection of coleoid cephalopods from the Lebanese Upper Cretaceous yielded a much higher diversity than previously assumed and revealed numerous extraordinarily well-preserved, soft-part characters. An analysis of the Prototeuthidina, a gladius-bearing group with a slender torpedo-shaped body, revealed two species:Dorateuthis syriacaandBoreopeltis smithin. sp. Previously unknown soft-part characters, such as the digestive tract, the gills, and the cephalic cartilage considerably improved our knowledge ofD. syriaca.Since none of the investigated specimens show more than eight arms, similarities with modern squids are regarded as superficial.Boreopeltis smithin. sp. is erected on the basis of its comparatively wideParaplesioteuthis-like gladius. The latter species represents the first unambiguous record of this genus in Upper Cretaceous deposits. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that the prototeuthidid clade consists of two lineages. The plesioteuthidid lineage originates from early JurassicParaplesioteuthisand leads toPlesioteuthisandDorateuthis.The other lineage is morphologically more conservative and leads toBoreopeltis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jongyun Jung ◽  
Min Huh ◽  
Koo-Geun Hwang ◽  
Hyun-Joo Kim ◽  
Byung-Do Choi ◽  
...  

Abstract The pterosaur is the earliest and largest powered flying vertebrate, even earlier and larger than the other extant archosaurian group, birds. However, evidence for this flying reptile, including the diversity of the small-sized pterosaur after the mid-Cretaceous, and their ecology, has remained elusive. Here we present numerous and dense pterosaur track assemblages from the Hwasun Seoyuri tracksite in the Upper Cretaceous Jangdong Formation of the Neungju Basin in Korea. The pterosaur track assemblage, assigned to Pteraichnus isp., consists of various sized, randomly oriented manus-dominated tracks with several pes claw marks. These features commonly indicate the semi-aquatic behavior and multi-age gregariousness of pterosaurs. The supposed trackmaker of pterosaur tracks would be the small-sized pterodactyloid that inhibited the Late Cretaceous Korean Peninsula, but that has not previously been reported. This ichnological evidence for the global distribution of small-sized pterosaurs could be interpreted to mean that the pterosaur fauna in the Late Cretaceous was more distributed and diverse than was previously known.


1891 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
pp. 456-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Jukes-Browne

Until recently no outcrop of the Vectian or Lower Greensand was known to occur between Lulworth on the coast of Dorset and the neighbourhood of Devizes in Wiltshire. It was supposed that, with the exception of a small area of Wealden in the Vale of Wardour, the whole of the Lower Cretaceous Series in Dorset and South Wilts was concealed and buried beneath the overlapping Upper Cretaceous strata. A recent examination of this district however has revealed two areas where the Vectian sands emerge from beneath the Gault. One of these has already been indicated in the pages of the Geological Magazine; the other is the subject of the present communication.


Phytotaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 402 (2) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
TOSHIHIRO YAMADA ◽  
TAKAE F. YAMADA ◽  
KAZUO TERADA ◽  
TAKESHI A. OHSAWA ◽  
ATSUSHI YABE ◽  
...  

A new fossil cycad species, Sueria laxinervis, is described from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) Quiriquina Formation in Cocholgüe, Bíobío Region, Chile. The generic assignment is supported by the taeniopterid-type leaf with haplocheilic stomata and sinuate anticlinal walls of leaf epidermal cells, while S. laxinervis clearly differs from the other two described Sueria species in its sparse veins and large epidermal cells. The vascular bundles of the midrib are arranged in an inverted-omega shape, supporting the placement of Sueria in Cycadales.


2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 182-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana-Voica Bojar ◽  
Stanislaw Halas ◽  
Hans-Peter Bojar ◽  
Dan Grigorescu ◽  
Stefan Vasile

AbstractIn order to constrain the age of the Upper Cretaceous continental Densuş-Ciula Formation from the Haţeg basin, South Carpathians, and correlate it with the other continental unit that occurs in the region, the Sânpetru Formation, we separated and dated by the K-Ar method biotites and amphiboles from volcanoclastic deposits. The mineral phases analysed are from two tuff layers and volcanic bombs cropping out near Rachitova village. Two tuff layers from the Densuş-Ciula Formation give early Maastrichtian ages of 69.8±1.3 and 71.3±1.6 Ma, respectively. The ages determined for the tuff layers constrain the age of deposition for the Densuş-Ciula Formation and enable further correlations with the available palaeomagnetic data from the deposits occurring along the Sibişel Valley that belong to the Sânpetru Formation. The volcanic bombs collected near to Răchitova village are andesites and dacites. The age determined by K-Ar method on hornblende separated from a volcanic bomb is 82.7±1.5 Ma, which is older than the underlying Campanian marine deposits in turbidite facies. This suggests that the volcanic bombs were re-deposited during the early Maastrichtian. Thus, the volcanics found at Răchitova have at least two origins: one type is related to an explosive synsedimentary volcanic activity, and the other type is represented by older andesitic/dacitic bombs, which most probably originate from a volcanic centre situated in the Haţeg region.


1960 ◽  
Vol S7-II (4) ◽  
pp. 398-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Papastamatiou

Abstract The stratigraphic sequence in the Parnassus-Kiona-Oeta mountain region, central Greece, consists of Triassic to Paleocene limestones and Flysch deposits. Flysch sedimentation began later (in the Lutetian) in the Oeta massif than elsewhere in the ranges. Three bauxite horizons are reported, one of which is a new discovery (in the upper Jurassic, below the Cladocoropsis limestones); the other two occur in the upper Cretaceous and in the Kimeridgian-Tithonian (Jurassic) boundary. The Parnassus-Kiona zone is thrust westward over the Pindus zone and in turn is overthrust by the sub-Pelagonian series.


1997 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 615-620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisco J. Vega ◽  
Rodney M. Feldmann ◽  
Adriana C. Ocampo ◽  
Kevin O. Pope

A new species of carcineretid crab, Carcineretesplanetarius, is described from the Upper Cretaceous (lower Maastrichtian) Barton Creek Dolomite at Albion Island, Belize. The age is based on the stratigraphic range of associated nerineid gastropods and correlation with nannoplankton, benthic foraminifera, and the other known congeneric species of crab found in Jamaica. Confirmation of this age aids in constraining the timing of ejecta deposits of the Chicxulub impact found at the top of Barton Creek Dolomite exposed on Albion Island. Paleoenvironmental and paleoecological analyses suggest that these crabs were swimmers in lagoonal settings, capable of burrowing a few centimeters into the mud for protection.


1871 ◽  
Vol 8 (90) ◽  
pp. 540-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Carruthers

It is a singular coincidence that in a former communication to this Magazine (Vol. VI., p. 1) I described, among other Coniferous fruits, two from the Gault at Folkestone, the one the cone of a pine, and the other of a Wellingtonia, and that in this communication I propose to describe two hitherto unknown fruits from the same deposit and found at the same locality, belonging also the one to a Wellingtonia and the other to a pine. Although the small pinecone already described (Pinites gracilis) differs in form and in the arrangement of the scales from any known cone, recent or fossil, it is more nearly related to that group of the section Pinea, the members of which are now associated with the Wellingtonias in the west of North America, than with any other member of the great genus Pinus. I, however, hesitated to refer to this interesting fact, because the occurrence of the two cones in the Gault might have been due to their being accidentally brought into the same silt by rivers having widely separated drainage areas. And it is easier to keep back generalizations based on imperfect data, than to suppress them after publication, when in the progress of investigation they are shown to be false. But I have now to describe a second pinecone more closely related to the Californian species of Pinea, and with it a new species of Wellingtonia. These surely point with tolerable certainty to the existence of a Coniferous vegetation on the high lands of the Upper Cretaceous period having a fades similar to that now existing in the mountains on the west of North America, between the thirtieth and fortieth parallels of latitude. No fossil referable to Sequoia has hitherto been found in strata older than the Gault, and here on the first appearance of the genus we find it associated with pines of the same group that now flourish by its side in the New World.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 145-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. H. Murray ◽  
C. A. Alves ◽  
C. H. Bastos

AbstractHigh-quality kaolins are produced from two sites in the Capim River area in Pará State, northern Brazil. One mine is operated by Rio Capim Caulim (RCC) owned by Imerys and the other by Pará Pigmentos S.A. (PPSA) owned by Caemi (CVRD Group). The kaolin deposits are located on low-relief plateaux with a lateritic cap. The kaolin strata are in the Ipixuna Formation of Upper Cretaceous Age. There are two distinct kaolin layers, a 4–5 m thick soft kaolin which is overlain in the southern portion of the basin by a 4–5 m thick hard kaolin. The soft and hard designations refer to particle size, with the soft kaolin being relatively coarse and the hard kaolin very fine. The kaolin is mined, partially beneficiated, and pumped through pipelines to the port at Barcarena on the Guama River, a large tributary of the Amazon River. The PPSA kaolin is fully processed at the plant near the mine site and pumped to Barcarena where it is spray dried. The RCC kaolin is only partially processed at the mine site. This partially processed kaolin is pumped to Barcarena where it is beneficiated. The finished kaolin is high quality and is shipped to North and South American, European, and Asian paper-coating markets. More than 1.6M tons were shipped from Barcarena in 2005.


1966 ◽  
Vol S7-VIII (3) ◽  
pp. 440-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard Porthault

Abstract New paleontologic data, especially the discovery of Globotruncana concavata (foraminifer) and an Inoceramus (I. sp. ex gr. muelleri) in the gray-blue upper Cretaceous limestones of Glandage-Creyers (Drome, French Prealps), indicate that the limestones are essentially Santonian, possibly extending upward into the lower Campanian. The underlying Gas conglomeratic complex is now assigned to the upper Turonian and, at the top, to the Coniacian. The Gas complex consists of two conglomerate layers separated by sandy limestones. Thus the so-called pre-Senonian orogeny apparently took place in at least two phases, one early Turonian (pre-Senonian), the other late Coniacian (early Senonian). The Coniacian, not the Turonian, is the major phase.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document