kaiparowits plateau
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

42
(FIVE YEARS 5)

H-INDEX

5
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew M. Jones ◽  
et al.

(1) Complete Ar geochronology data, bentonite correlations, and collection in Kaiparowits Plateau, Cenomanian-Turonian boundary age calculations, core photos and description of hiatuses, and Angus Core depth scale alignment correction. (2) Time scale tables for cores.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew M. Jones ◽  
et al.

(1) Complete Ar geochronology data, bentonite correlations, and collection in Kaiparowits Plateau, Cenomanian-Turonian boundary age calculations, core photos and description of hiatuses, and Angus Core depth scale alignment correction. (2) Time scale tables for cores.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew M. Jones ◽  
et al.

(1) Complete Ar geochronology data, bentonite correlations, and collection in Kaiparowits Plateau, Cenomanian-Turonian boundary age calculations, core photos and description of hiatuses, and Angus Core depth scale alignment correction. (2) Time scale tables for cores.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew M. Jones ◽  
et al.

(1) Complete Ar geochronology data, bentonite correlations, and collection in Kaiparowits Plateau, Cenomanian-Turonian boundary age calculations, core photos and description of hiatuses, and Angus Core depth scale alignment correction. (2) Time scale tables for cores.


Author(s):  
Aaron R. Woods ◽  
Ryan P. Harrod

This chapter features a bioarchaeological examination of traumatic injuries and pathological conditions on human skeletal remains from the Fremont and Virgin Branch Puebloan cultures of the pre-contact American Great Basin and Southwest. This study indicates that there were differences across the borders of these regions, which share a boundary along the southern portions of Utah and Nevada. The Fremont and Puebloan borders considered in this chapter include the boundary between Parowan Valley and the St. George Basin, and the Canyons of the Escalante River and the Kaiparowits Plateau, all in the state of Utah. Additional Ancestral Puebloan bioarchaeological data will be discussed from southern Nevada to help illustrate differences between Fremont and Ancestral Puebloan skeletons. The skeletal evidence allows us to infer that the borders between the Fremont and Virgin Branch Puebloans and the Fremont and the Kayenta Puebloans were very distinct, and results demonstrated that there was a much higher rate of trauma and pathology among the Fremont.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 229-291
Author(s):  
Alan Titus ◽  
Jeffrey Eaton ◽  
Joseph Sertich

The Late Cretaceous succession of southern Utah was deposited in an active foreland basin circa 100 to 70 million years ago. Thick siliciclastic units represent a variety of marine, coastal, and alluvial plain environments, but are dominantly terrestrial, and also highly fossiliferous. Conditions for vertebrate fossil preservation appear to have optimized in alluvial plain settings more distant from the coast, and so in general the locus of good preservation of diverse assemblages shifts eastward through the Late Cretaceous. The Middle and Late Campanian record of the Paunsaugunt and Kaiparowits Plateau regions is especially good, exhibiting common soft tissue preservation, and comparable with that of the contemporaneous Judith River and Belly River Groups to the north. Collectively the Cenomanian through Campanian strata of southern Utah hold one of the most complete single region terrestrial vertebrate fossil records in the world.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 229-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan L. Titus ◽  
Jeffrey G. Eaton ◽  
Joseph Sertich

The Late Cretaceous succession of southern Utah was deposited in an active foreland basin circa 100 to 70 million years ago. Thick siliciclastic units represent a variety of marine, coastal, and alluvial plain environments, but are dominantly terrestrial, and also highly fossiliferous. Conditions for vertebrate fossil preservation appear to have optimized in alluvial plain settings more distant from the coast, and so in general the locus of good preservation of diverse assemblages shifts eastward through the Late Cretaceous. The Middle and Late Campanian record of the Paunsaugunt and Kaiparowits Plateau regions is especially good, exhibiting common soft tissue preservation, and comparable with that of the contemporaneous Judith River and Belly River Groups to the north. Collectively the Cenomanian through Campanian strata of southern Utah hold one of the most complete single region terrestrial vertebrate fossil records in the world.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document