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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Canada
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Western Canada
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Saskatchewan (1)
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North America (2)
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United States
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Florida (1)
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Midcontinent (1)
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Nebraska
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Dawes County Nebraska (1)
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Sioux County Nebraska (2)
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South Dakota (1)
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Texas (1)
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Wyoming
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Natrona County Wyoming (1)
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Teton County Wyoming (1)
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White River (1)
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fossils
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Chordata
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Vertebrata
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Tetrapoda
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Mammalia
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Theria
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Eutheria
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Carnivora
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Fissipeda
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Mustelidae (1)
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Invertebrata
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Arthropoda
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Mandibulata
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Crustacea
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Ostracoda (1)
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Mollusca
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Gastropoda (1)
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microfossils (1)
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Plantae
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algae
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diatoms (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Arikaree Group (2)
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Neogene
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Miocene
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lower Miocene (3)
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Paleogene
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Chadron Formation (1)
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Eocene
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upper Eocene
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Chadronian (1)
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Oligocene
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lower Oligocene (1)
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White River Group (1)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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volcanic rocks
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pyroclastics
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tuff (1)
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Primary terms
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biogeography (1)
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Canada
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Western Canada
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Saskatchewan (1)
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Arikaree Group (2)
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Neogene
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Miocene
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lower Miocene (3)
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Paleogene
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Chadron Formation (1)
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Eocene
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upper Eocene
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Chadronian (1)
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Oligocene
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lower Oligocene (1)
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White River Group (1)
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Chordata
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Vertebrata
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Tetrapoda
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Mammalia
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Theria
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Eutheria
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Carnivora
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Fissipeda
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Mustelidae (1)
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igneous rocks
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volcanic rocks
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pyroclastics
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tuff (1)
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Invertebrata
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Arthropoda
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Mandibulata
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Crustacea
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Ostracoda (1)
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Mollusca
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Gastropoda (1)
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North America (2)
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paleontology (1)
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Plantae
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algae
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diatoms (1)
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sedimentary petrology (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks
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sandstone (1)
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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loess (1)
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mud (1)
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stratigraphy (1)
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United States
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Florida (1)
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Midcontinent (1)
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Nebraska
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Dawes County Nebraska (1)
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Sioux County Nebraska (2)
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South Dakota (1)
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Texas (1)
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Wyoming
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Natrona County Wyoming (1)
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Teton County Wyoming (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks
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sandstone (1)
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volcaniclastics (1)
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sediments
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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loess (1)
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mud (1)
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volcaniclastics (1)
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soils
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paleosols (1)
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Lithostratigraphic revision and correlation of the lower part of the White River Group: South Dakota to Nebraska
Magnetic stratigraphy and biostratigraphy of the Orellan and Whitneyan land-mammal “ages” in the White River Group
Lithostratigraphic revision and redescription of the Brule Formation (White River Group) of northwestern Nebraska
The Big Cottonwood Creek Member: A new member of the Chadron Formation in northwestern Nebraska
The Arikareean Land Mammal Age in Texas and Florida: Southern extension of Great Plains faunas and Gulf Coastal Plain endemism
Lithostratigraphy, paleontology, and biochronology of the Chadron, Brule, and Arikaree Formations in North Dakota
Arikareean and Hemingfordian faunas of the Cady Mountains, Mojave Desert Province, California
The giant mustelid Megalictis from the early Miocene carnivore dens at Agate Fossil Beds National Monument, Nebraska; earliest evidence of dimorphism in New World Mustelidae (Carnivora, Mammalia)
Taphonomy and sedimentology of Arikaree (lower Miocene) fluvial, eolian, and lacustrine paleoenvironments, Nebraska and Wyoming; A paleobiota entombed in fine-grained volcaniclastic rocks
Nonmarine lower Miocene rocks widely exposed in nearly continuous outcrop over approximately 3100 km 2 (1,200 mi 2 ) of the Hartville Table in southeastern Wyoming and western Nebraska indicate a semiarid continental interior, with seasonal climate characterized by sandy ephemeral or intermittent braided streams, interchannel plains mantled by fine-grained volcaniclastic loess, and shallow ephemeral holomictic lakes. These paleoenvironments are recognized on the basis of distinctive sedimentologic, faunal, and taphonomic characteristics. Stream sediments (10 percent or less of total outcrop) are primarily tuffaceous silty sandstones, deposited as reworked pyroclastic debris in wide shallow valleys. These valleys first filled with fluvial fine-grained volcaniclastics, but with the cessation of streamflow in the region, filling was completed by air-fall volcaniclastic loess that blanketed both valleys and interchannel reaches. Fluvial sediments within the valleys include much spatially dispersed mammal bone that had been scavenged and subaerially weathered prior to burial. Waterholes, situated in or adjacent to the valleys, filled with tuff and carbonate mud containing freshwater ostracods, pulmonate gastropods, diatoms, and charophyte algae. These tuffaceous waterhole muds intertongue with fluvial volcaniclastic sediments and are the locus of major mammalian bone beds, the best known preserved at Agate Fossil Beds National Monument. Bones of chalicothere, rhinoceros, and entelodont are common in waterhole bone beds and in fluvial sediments in the region. Massive tuffaceous air-fall silty sandstones (87 percent of outcrop) punctuated by silcrete paleosols were deposited in the interchannel reaches; mammal remains are commonly represented by widely scattered, isolated bones and partial skeletons of young and aged ungulates, chiefly oreodonts and camels, indicative of attritional deaths over time. No bone beds occur. Thin silicified carbonate mudstones (about 2 percent of outcrop) with ostracods, plant debris, and aquatic pulmonate gastropods (but without fish or other aquatic vertebrates) indicate shallow, holomictic, ephemeral lakes that filled with homogeneous micrite mud. These lakes were isolated sheet-like bodies of water unassociated with stream sediments. Following desiccation, lacustrine sediments were commonly overprinted by pedogenic features. Eolian transport of fine pyroclastic detritus into the North American midcontinent was essential to preservation of these sedimentary environments and their rich fossil record. In the Americas and in Africa during the Cenozoic, fine-grained volcaniclastic sediments blanketed large geographic areas within the continental interiors, preserving significant temporal intervals of the vertebrate fossil record. If volcanism had not occurred, these intervals would exist as major hiatuses in our knowledge of vertebrate, particularly mammalian, evolution. The important role of fine-grained volcaniclastics in preservation of mammalian faunas and their associated depositional environments in the Americas and in Africa during the Cenozoic deserves greater emphasis.