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Mount Auburn Member

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Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 December 1988
PALAIOS (1988) 3 (6): 588–597.
... and preferential destruction of the thinner brachial valve by abrasion The Mount Auburn Member consists of nodular to wavy and breakage. Polished sections of 50 shells exhibit a repeated thinly interbedded limestone (60%) and dolomitic claystone filling sequence beginning with mixed and laminated skeletal (40...
Image
Published: 01 May 2016
C5 Liberty Waynesville Blanchester Clarksville Fort Ancient Arnheim Oregonia C4 Sunset* Maysvillian Grant Lake Mount Auburn C3 Corryville Bellevue C2 Fairview Miamitown Fairmount Mount Hope* Edenian
Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 November 2011
PALAIOS (2011) 26 (11): 682–692.
... in the Cincinnatian Series ( Fig. 2 ; Holland, 1993 ; Holland and Patzkowsky, 1996 ). As explained below, our dataset includes specimens from the Fairview Formation, Miamitown Shale, and Bellevue Member of the Grant Lake Formation (Maysvillian, C2 sequence); the Corryville and Mount Auburn Members of the Grant Lake...
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Journal Article
Journal: Palynology
Published: 03 April 2017
Palynology (2017) 41 (2): 180–182.
..., and the like’. Although the name ‘cellosolve’ originally applied just to ethylene glycol monoethyl ether, the name has become a generic term for many, if not most, glycol ethers. CORTLAND F. EBLE received his BS degree in geology from Auburn University, Auburn, Alabama, USA, in 1981, and his MS...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2010
Journal of Paleontology (2010) 84 (6): 1121–1134.
... Limestone, and Liberty Formation. Trilobite bioclasts represent only 5 to 7% of fossil bioclasts in the shallower water, upper shoreface environments of the Bellevue and Mount Auburn Members of the Grant Lake Formation, the Bellevue and Straight Creek Members of the Grant Lake Limestone, the Arnheim...
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Journal Article
Published: 16 April 2020
Journal of Sedimentary Research (2020) 90 (4): 389–402.
... are normalized to 100% using all the end members, which correspond to quartz, feldspar, and lithic fragments ( Table 1 ). The following compositional parameters were calculated: Q t , total quartz; Q m , monocrystalline quartz grains; Q p , polycrystalline quartz grains, including chert grains; F, total feldspar...
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Journal Article
Published: 11 April 2022
Journal of Sedimentary Research (2022) 92 (3): 304–319.
... 3+ end members for the chrome spinels possibly suggest a derivation from an alpine-type peridotite complex. Laser 40 Ar/ 39 Ar analyses of detrital muscovite from eastern anthracite fields and western bituminous fields record separate ages, with the former characterized by prominent Middle to Late...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 February 2010
Vadose Zone Journal (2010) 9 (1): 204–206.
.... Their critical comments and helpful suggestions have played a major role in making Vadose Zone Journal a success. Members of the VZJ Editorial Board want to express their appreciation to the following individuals who helped review manuscripts in 2009. We extend our apologies and thanks to any reviewer whose...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2011
Environmental Geosciences (2011) 18 (1): 1–17.
... to serve as a natural gas reservoir. Among the eight Queenston gas fields that produced in 1987, Saroff (1987) reported that the Auburn gas field of Cayuga County was the largest, with more than 30,000 ac proven productive. We summarize from Saroff (1987) information that is especially pertinent...
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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 2021
Economic Geology (2021) 116 (5): 1141–1159.
...., enrichment in Cs, Rb, Ba, U, Th, and Pb, depletion in Nb and Ta) that are typical of arc lavas. In the Mount Carlton district the Lizzie Creek Volcanic Group is host to high-sulfidation epithermal Cu-Au-Ag mineralization, whereas farther to the south near Collinsville (~50 km from Mount Carlton...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 May 2012
GSA Bulletin (2012) 124 (5-6): 643–656.
... is overprinted by the shear zone, to be a member of the Salisbury suite. The age of metamorphic retrogression due to shearing was inferred from the Southmont pluton ( Fig. 3 ), to the west and outside of the Gold Hill shear zone. Butler and Fullagar (1978) considered motion on the Gold Hill shear zone...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2015
Earth Sciences History (2015) 34 (2): 243–262.
... of polygenism in regard to human origins. This put him in conflict with traditional claims regarding the unity of the human race. Like Gray, Agassiz was also buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Interestingly, though, the grave marker his son Alexander Agassiz (1835–1910) chose for him...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2000
Journal of Paleontology (2000) 74 (6): 983–991.
... , Mount Auburn Member (upper Maysvillian), McMillan Formation, Ohio ( Alberstadt, 1979 mentioned the presence of a cruralium-like structure which is similar to the cardinalia of Gnamptorhynchos, but serial sectioning of topotypes are needed for more detailed comparison). Platystrophia...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 2014
GSA Bulletin (2014) 126 (7-8): 990–1015.
... ), composed predominantly of metapelite (locally graphitic) interlayered with quartzite and minor amphibolite, and (2) the underlying 2.5–3-km-thick Auburn Formation (Auburn Schist/Gneiss of Bentley and Neathery, 1970 ), an interlayered metapelite (muscovite-biotite schist)/metapsammite (coarse-grained...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1966
AAPG Bulletin (1966) 50 (5): 1018–1023.
..., Maysville, and Richmond Groups, and the Mount Hope, Fairmount, Bellevue, Corryville, Mount Auburn, Arnheim, Waynesville, and Liberty Formations. Economy, Southgate, and McMicken have been suppressed at their type areas by Weiss and others (1965), and the name Elkhorn Formation recently has been suppressed...
FIGURES
Published: 10 December 2018
DOI: 10.1130/2018.0051(03)
EISBN: 9780813756516
... Auburn Member of the Grant Lake Formation and Arnheim Formation The uppermost Grant Lake Formation (sensu stricto) comprises the Mount Auburn Member. In the Louisville area, the Mount Auburn is a 1.5- to 3-m-thick, coarse, phosphatic skeletal grainstone interpreted to be the TST of sequence C4 ( Fig...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2010
Journal of Environmental and Engineering Geophysics (2010) 15 (3): 197–202.
.... in Soil Physics (1979) from the University of Missouri. He holds a Ph.D. in Clay Mineralogy from Auburn University (1990). His interests include data analysis and model development, clay mineralogy analytical method development, and VNIR spectroscopy of soil materials. Scott Bradford serves...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1967
AAPG Bulletin (1967) 51 (12): 2400–2429.
... been done at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, aided by funds of the “Coastal Plain Project” contributed to the Academy by several oil companies, state surveys and other organizations, and a few individuals. Much of this report was written while the writer was a member...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 03 February 2022
GSA Bulletin (2022) 134 (9-10): 2321–2334.
... ) followed the methods in Mueller et al. (2008) . Zircons were handpicked, mounted in epoxy disks, and ground and polished to expose the interiors of the grains. Grains were then imaged using backscattered electrons and cathodoluminescence (CL) to identify areas best suited for analysis ( Fig. 6 ). Grains...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1967
AAPG Bulletin (1967) 51 (6): 918–936.
... is largely biostratigraphic by definition and commonly inapplicable in practical field and subsurface studies. The lowest strata are referred to the Kope Formation. A distinctive sequence of strata in the upper Kope is proposed as a member. Fairview is redefined as a lithostratigraphic unit. Kope-Fairview...
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