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A NEW, LARGE, LATE PLEISTOCENE DEMOSPONGE FROM SOUTHEASTERN FLORIDA
First documentation of tidal-channel sponge biostromes (upper Pleistocene, southeastern Florida)
Endosulfan Losses through Runoff and Leaching from Calcareous Gravelly or Marl Soils Florida Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Series No. R-07431.
210 Pb chronology of sequences affected by burrow excavation and infilling; examples from shallow marine carbonate sediment sequences, Holocene South Florida and Caicos Platform, British West Indies
Recognizing morphospecies in colonial reef corals; I, Landmark-based methods
Modern Coral Reefs of Western Atlantic: New Geological Perspective
Pleistocene Barrier Bar Seaward of Ooid Shoal Complex Near Miami, Florida
Abstract This publication represents the proceedings, of a symposium on The Geology, Paleobotany, Geochemistry, and Microbiology of Peats." The symposium was held during the Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America and associated societies, which took place in Miami, 18-20 November, 1974, and was jointly sponsored by the Coal Geology Division of the Society and the Organic Geochemistry Division of the Geochemical Society. Fourteen papers were presented, and nine are included in this publication. Five authors elected to make other arrangements for publishing their work; but the abstracts of these five papers, as submitted for inclusion in Abstracts with Programs, volume 6, number 7, 1974, are included here for completeness. Peats are of interest to scientists in a variety of disciplines: coal geology, organic geochemistry, soil science, plant ecology, the general ecology of food chains, agronomy, and environmental studies. Workers in many of these fields contributed to this symposium, but it is perhaps fair to say that the central unifying core is the consideration of peat as the precursor of coal. From a broad and general earth science point of view, peats and coals are of special interest because (a) such sediments contain higher concentrations of organic matter than any other common sedimentary deposits, and (b) in most peat beds and coal seams, the greater part of the organic matter and part of the mineral matter are autochthonous in the strictest sense, so that the many biological and chemical fossils that they contain are valid indicators of the organisms from which the organic matter was derived or of the environment of deposition. By contrast, although the reservoir and source rocks of petroleum do contain chemical fossils indicating their origin, reservoir rocks at least, cannot, of their nature, contain relevant fossils in the ordinary biological sense.