4 edition of The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America found in the catalog.
Published
1916
by Govt. Print. Off. in Washington
.
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | by Edward W. Berry. |
Series | U.S. Geological Survey. Professional paper -- 91., Professional paper (Geological Survey (U.S.)) -- 91. |
The Physical Object | |
---|---|
Pagination | 481 p. |
Number of Pages | 481 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL14021095M |
The Eocene epoch also witnessed the rise of North America's western mountain ranges. Terrestrial Life During the Eocene Epoch Perissodactyls (odd-toed ungulates, such as horses and tapirs) and artiodactyls (even-toed ungulates, such as deer and pigs) can all trace their ancestry back to the primitive mammalian genera of the Eocene epoch. to East Asia, appeared in North America duringIn contrast, some of the same lineages survived the early to mid Eocene (Chalk Bluffs flora, Greeninto the Neogene along the West Coast and in River flora, Rate Homestead flora, MacGinitie, 1, ),and was abundant in Oligocene flo- ras from southwestern Montana (Becker, 1.
From the Palaeocene onwards, records of costapalmate leaves become more frequent and widespread. In North America, records for the Rocky Mountains and Great Plains have been reviewed by Brown (), whereas records for the Middle and Upper Eocene floras of southeastern North America were reviewed by (Berry ) and also by Daghlian (). Full Text; PDF ( K) PDF-Plus ( K) Citing articles; Eocene paleontology and geology of western North America 1. David R. Greenwood, a Kathleen B. Pigg, b Melanie L. DeVore c a Department of Biology, Brandon University, J.R. Brodie Science Centre, th Street, Brandon, MB R7A 6A9, Canada.. b School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, PO Box , Tempe, AZ .
One of the best glimpses of the late Eocene and Oligocene floras comes from southeastern North America in the re-gion of the Mississippian Embayment. These floras were initially surveyed by Berry (, , , , , ) who, over the course of 25 years, described more than species of Eocene and Oligocene fossil plants. In my account of the lower Eocene flora of southeastern North America (U. S. Geological Survey, Professional Paper 91) I described as Zamia (?) wilcoxensis (op. cit., p. pl. f. 2) a single broken pinnule of a cycad which I compared with the existing Floridian Zamia pumila Linné. It is interesting to.
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Title. The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America, Related Titles. Series: Professional paper (Geological Survey (U.S.)) ; By. Berry, Edward Wilber. Additional Physical Format: Online version: Berry, Edward Wilber, Lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America.
Washington: Govt. Print. The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America Item Preview remove-circle The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America by Berry, Edward Wilber, b. Publication date This book is available with additional data at Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Pages: The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America, Pages; The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America, By. Berry, Edward Wilber, Publication Details. Washington,Govt. Print. Off., If you are generating a PDF of a journal article or book chapter, please feel free to enter the title and author information.
The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America: Series title: Professional Paper: Series number: DOI: /pp Edition-Year Published: Language: ENGLISH: Description: p. Country: United States: Other Geospatial: Southeastern North America: Online Only (Y/N) N: Additional Online Files (Y/N) N: Google Analytic Metrics.
The Lower Eocene floras of southeastern Norlh. America. re first published as a comprehensi\'e. flora by E. Berry in and later revised bv.
him in' This flora is one of the. A paleoclimatic interpretation of the Eocene floras of southeastern North America. In: A. Graham (Editor), Vegetation and Vegetational History of Northern Latin America. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. MS Book and Mineral Company USGS Professional Papers - Flora.
Home Page: E. / THE LOWER EOCENE FLORAS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH AMERICA,cl, pages, plages, 16 figs., $ PP 91 / Berry, E. / THE LOWER EOCENE FLORAS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH AMERICA,afb, pages, plages, 16 figs., $ Investigations of angiosperms from the Eocene of southeastern North America: samaras of Fraxinus wilcoxiana Berry.
Rev. Palaeobot. Palynol., Fruits of Fraxinuz L. from Eocene sediments of North America constitute the oldest unequivocal macrofossil evidence of the genus, of the subfamily Oleoideae, and of the family Oleaceae.
Since the original reports of the Eocene floras from southeastern North America (Berry, ), methods for the study of fossil plant remains have been. Author of The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America, Fossil nutlets of the genus Lithospermum, Tertiary fossil plants from the Republic of Haiti, The middle and upper Eocene floras of southeastern North America, The affinities and distribution of the lower Eocene flora of southeastern North America, The flora of the Woodbine sand at Arthurs Bluff, Texas, The flora of the Cheyenne.
The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America, By Edward Wilber Berry Topics: Eocene, Paleobotany, Southern States. The rich leaf flora of the Florissant lake beds has been studied since the s by paleobotanists including Leo Lesquereux (), F.H.
Knowlton (), and T.D.A Cockerell (), among first comprehensive account of the flora was the monograph by Harry D. MacGinitie () who reported species of plants in 44 families, including 84 genera of higher plants.
The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North America, by Edward W. Berry. By Edward Wilber Berry Topics: Eocene, Paleobotany, Southern States.
Additional Physical Format: Online version: Berry, Edward Wilber, Middle and upper Eocene floras of southeastern North America (OCoLC) Search result for edward-wilber-b-berry: The Flora of the Raritan Formation (), The Affinities and Distribution of the Lower Eocene Flora of Southeastern North America (), The Flora of the Cheyenne Sandstone of Kansas (), The Lower Eocene Floras of Southeastern North America(), The Flora of the Raritan Formation(), Flora.
The Affinities and Distribution of the Lower Eocene Flora of Southeastern North America by Edward Wilber Berry avg rating — 0 ratings — published — 10 editions. New 40 Ar/ 39 Ar data from the Willwood Formation in the Bighorn Basin of Wyoming establish an age of ± Ma for earliest Lostcabinian (late Wasatchian) faunas and coeval early Eocene floras.
Strata just beneath earliest Wasatchian faunas can be correlated with the NP9/NP10 boundary in marine sedimentary units, which has an interpolated.
Neviusia leaves from One Mile Creek near Princeton, British Columbia are more similar to N. cliftonii, an endemic from Mount Shasta, California, than to N.
alabamensis of southeastern North America. A better documentation of the Okanagan Highlands floras is essential to our understanding of the evolution of North American temperate floras and.
The Lower Eocene Floras of Southeastern North America; The Middle and Upper Eocene floras of Southeastern North America.
U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 92; Berry, E. "A species of Musa in the Tertiary of South America". PNAS. 11 (6): –. Tertiary Floras of Eastern North America 1. known record the following genera had already attained a Holarctic distribution and were indigenous in southeastern North America at the beginning of Wilcox time: and less than a dozen species of the extensive lower Eocene flora of this region have been detected in the middle Eocene.The Mississippi embayment floras that occur as far north as 36° latitude are tropical during the warm intervals of the early and middle Eocene.
Floras from the west coast of North America were, during the late middle Eocene, tropical to north of latitude 40–45° (Wolfe, ); latest Eocene floras indicate paratropical climate at these.The paleontological history of Nypa, known today as the mangrovepalm, is traced through geological time back to the Late Cretaceous.
Emphasis is laid on the New World occurrences, especially in NorthAmerica, where Nypa is known from fossil fruits and pollen. In SouthAmerica, the stratigraphic range of this palm extends from theMaastrichtian to the late Eocene, whereas in North America.