Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America

Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America
Author: Michael O. Woodburne
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 413
Release: 2004-04-21
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0231503784

This book places into modern context the information by which North American mammalian paleontologists recognize, divide, calibrate, and discuss intervals of mammalian evolution known as North American Land Mammal Ages. It incorporates new information on the systematic biology of the fossil record and utilizes the many recent advances in geochronologic methods and their results. The book describes the increasingly highly resolved stratigraphy into which all available temporally significant data and applications are integrated. Extensive temporal coverage includes the Lancian part of the Late Cretaceous, and geographical coverage includes information from Mexico, an integral part of the North American fauna, past and present.

Biostratigraphy and Vertebrate Paleontology of the San Timoteo Badlands, Southern California

Biostratigraphy and Vertebrate Paleontology of the San Timoteo Badlands, Southern California
Author: L. Barry Albright III
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2000-03-08
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780520915985

The author describes forty-two fossil taxa recovered during a study of the San Timoteo Badlands that used magnetobiostratigraphy to develop a temporal framework for addressing the tectonic evolution of southern California over the last 6 million years. For the Pliocene, small mammals are an effective means of correlating a magnetostratigraphy to the Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale when radioisotopic dates are unobtainable.

Geology of the San Francisco North Quadrangle, California

Geology of the San Francisco North Quadrangle, California
Author: Julius Schlocker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 126
Release: 1974
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

Additional title page description: The distribution and character of the bedrock and surficial deposits in the northern part of the City of San Francisco and southern Marin County, Calif., including a description of the Franciscan Formation in its type area and notes on engineering geology in an urban area.

Allophaiomys and the Age of the Olyor Suite, Krestovka Sections, Yakutia

Allophaiomys and the Age of the Olyor Suite, Krestovka Sections, Yakutia
Author: Charles Albert Repenning
Publisher:
Total Pages: 296
Release: 1992
Genre: Geology
ISBN:

Microtine history indicates mosaic evolution and complex dispersal patterns around the Northern Hemisphere ; by reflecting this history and evaluating stage of population evolution, microtine biochronology can discriminate time periods as brief as 5,000 years.

The Great American Biotic Interchange

The Great American Biotic Interchange
Author: Francis G. Stehli
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 611
Release: 2013-03-09
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1468491814

Two rather different elements combine to explain the origin of this volume: one scientific and one personal. The broader of the two is the scientific basis-the time for such a volume had arrived. Geology had made remarkable progress toward an understanding of the phys ical history of the Caribbean Basin for the last 100 million years or so. On the biological side, many new discoveries had elucidated the distributional history of terrestrial orga nisms in and between the two Americas. Geological and biological data had been combined to yield the timing of important events with unprecedented resolution. Clearly, when each of two broad disciplines is making notable advances and when each provides new insights for the other, the rewards of cross-disciplinary contacts increase exponentially. The present volume represents an attempt to bring together a group of geologists, paleontologists and biologists capable of exploiting this opportunity through presentation of an interdisciplinary synthesis of evidence and hypothesis concerning interamerican connections during the Cretaceous and Cenozoic. Advances in plate tectonics form the basis for a modern synthesis and, in the broadest terms, dictate the framework within which the past and present distributions of organisms must be interpreted. Any scientific dis cipline must seek tests of its conclusions from data outside of its own confines.