Lower Permian Colonial Rugose Corals, Western and Northwestern Pangaea

Lower Permian Colonial Rugose Corals, Western and Northwestern Pangaea
Author: Jerzy Fedorowski
Publisher: NRC Research Press
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2007
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9780660196640

"The most comprehensive summary available on the stratigraphic occurrence, geographic distribution, phylogeny, and taxonomy of Early Permian colonial rugose corals that occupied the Cordilleran - Arctic - Uralian (CAU) Realm, along the northwestern and western marine shelves and accreted terranes of the ancient supercontinent Pangaea. It is based on all previous studies by other coral specialists, a thorough review of all published data, and on information from a very large number of new collections from new areas. This book contains a new classification and phylogenetic scheme, based on critical restudy of the entire coral fauna at all taxonomic levels."--Publisher's website.

The Pennsylvanian-early Permian Bird Spring Carbonate Shelf, Southeastern California

The Pennsylvanian-early Permian Bird Spring Carbonate Shelf, Southeastern California
Author: Calvin H. Stevens
Publisher:
Total Pages: 92
Release: 2007
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780813724294

"The Bird Spring Shelf in southeastern California, along with coeval turbidite basins to the west, records a complex history of Pennsylvanian and Early Permian sedimentation, sea-level changes, and deformation along this part of the western North American continental margin. In this work we describe and figure the fusulinids, including several new species, and establish detailed correlations between deposits of the shelf and the flanking basins. We then use these correlations to reconstruct the depositional history, paleogeography, and deformational history of the region. This work adds significant detail to existing interpretations of the late Paleozoic as a time of major tectonic instability on the continental margin of southeastern California as it changed from a relatively passive margin, which had persisted through most of the Paleozoic, to an active convergent margin that would characterize the Mesozoic."--Publisher's website.