- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
NARROW
GeoRef Subject
-
all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Arctic Ocean (1)
-
North America
-
Western Interior (2)
-
-
Raton Basin (1)
-
United States
-
Colorado
-
Arapahoe County Colorado (1)
-
-
Denver Basin (1)
-
-
-
fossils
-
Invertebrata
-
Mollusca
-
Cephalopoda
-
Ammonoidea
-
Ammonites (1)
-
-
-
-
-
microfossils (1)
-
palynomorphs (1)
-
Plantae
-
Pteridophyta (1)
-
Spermatophyta
-
Angiospermae (1)
-
Gymnospermae
-
Coniferales (1)
-
-
-
-
-
geologic age
-
Cenozoic
-
Tertiary
-
Paleogene
-
Paleocene
-
lower Paleocene
-
K-T boundary (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous
-
Upper Cretaceous
-
Campanian
-
upper Campanian (1)
-
-
K-T boundary (1)
-
Maestrichtian (1)
-
Pierre Shale (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Primary terms
-
Arctic Ocean (1)
-
biogeography (1)
-
Cenozoic
-
Tertiary
-
Paleogene
-
Paleocene
-
lower Paleocene
-
K-T boundary (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
Invertebrata
-
Mollusca
-
Cephalopoda
-
Ammonoidea
-
Ammonites (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous
-
Upper Cretaceous
-
Campanian
-
upper Campanian (1)
-
-
K-T boundary (1)
-
Maestrichtian (1)
-
Pierre Shale (1)
-
-
-
-
North America
-
Western Interior (2)
-
-
paleoclimatology (1)
-
paleoecology (1)
-
paleogeography (1)
-
palynomorphs (1)
-
Plantae
-
Pteridophyta (1)
-
Spermatophyta
-
Angiospermae (1)
-
Gymnospermae
-
Coniferales (1)
-
-
-
-
United States
-
Colorado
-
Arapahoe County Colorado (1)
-
-
Denver Basin (1)
-
-
-
rock formations
-
Denver Formation (1)
-
Raton Formation (1)
-
Cissites panduratus
A “Cissites” panduratus (BC35), DMNH-24430, loc. 2379; B , alternate ...
New paleontological constraints on the paleogeography of the Western Interior Seaway near the end of the Cretaceous (late Campanian–Maastrichtian) with a special emphasis on the paleogeography of southern Colorado, U.S.A.
A biostratigraphically important leaf fossil from the Vermejo-Raton megaflo...
Late Campanian–early Maastrichtian paleogeography of the Western Interior S...
Stratigraphy and megaflora of a K-T boundary section in the eastern Denver Basin, Colorado
Regional fossil succession in the late Campanian–Maastrichtian. Key to numb...
Abstract The Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary section at the West Bijou Site is remarkable because many of the methods used to constrain the position of a terrestrial K-T boundary have been successfully applied to a local section. These include palynology, magnetostratigraphy, shocked quartz and iridium analysis, vertebrate paleontology, geochronology, and paleobotany. The West Bijou Site K-T boundary records the extinction of the Wodehouseia spinata Assemblage Zone palynoflora (21%), followed immediately by the presence of a fern-spore abundance anomaly (74%) and the subsequent appearance of the P1 palynoflora. This palynological extinction is coincident with the presence of shock-metamorphosed quartz grains (5+ planes of parallel lamellae) and an iridium spike of 619 ± 32 parts per trillion within the 3-cm-thick boundary claystone. The boundary lies within a reversely magnetized interval, recognized as subchron C29r, substantiated by a radiometrically dated tuff 4.5 m below the boundary with an age of 65.73 ± 0.13 Ma. Dinosaur remains attributable to the late Maastrichtian Triceratops Zone were discovered 4 m below the boundary clay, and a partial jaw of a diagnostic Pu1 mammal was discovered 12 m above. Fossil plants are most abundant in the Paleocene and document a low diversity ecosystem recognizable as the southernmost extension of the FUI disaster recovery flora that radiated in North America following the K-T boundary cataclysm.