1-20 OF 100 RESULTS FOR

Zemorrian

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (2): 437–438.
...Ann Tipton Abstract Exceptional foraminiferal sequences of Zemorrian and Saucesian (Oligocene-Miocene) age occur in the subsurface of the southwestern San Joaquin Valley in sediments referable to the Pleito and Temblor Formations. Downdip from the basin margin, these subsurface sequences...
Image
—Laumontite occurs mostly in <span class="search-highlight">Zemorrian</span> (late early and late Oligocene) sand...
Published: 01 January 1995
Figure 13 —Laumontite occurs mostly in Zemorrian (late early and late Oligocene) sandstones. Petrographic analysis of Zemorrian sandstone samples from 11 wells indicates that the highest laumontite abundance (average of 18% by modal analysis) occurs in well 12–30; the abundance of laumontite
Image
—Thin-section porosity in <span class="search-highlight">Zemorrian</span> (late early and late Oligocene) sandsto...
Published: 01 January 1995
Figure 15 —Thin-section porosity in Zemorrian (late early and late Oligocene) sandstones containing more than 10% laumontite does not exceed 6%. We use thin-section porosities as an indicator of reservoir quality because helium porosity measurements were not possible for many samples due
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1983
AAPG Bulletin (1983) 67 (3): 413.
... Stage and Refugian Benthic Foraminiferal Stage. These correlations were based on faunal similarity between Pacific Coast and European assemblages. The most useful provincial boundaries of Late Eocene to Oligocene age are the Narizian-Refugian and Refugian-Zemorrian Benthic Foraminiferal Stage boundaries...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (2): 435.
... and Zemorrian (Oligocene), and Saucesian (early Miocene) Stages can be studied. A monophyletic group of species of Uvigerina and Siphogenerina aids in defining successive faunal zones or biozones that correlate in part with the type sections of the Refugian, Zemorrian, and Saucesian Stages. For example...
Series: Miscellaneous Publication
Published: 01 January 2014
DOI: 10.32375/2014-MP51.5
EISBN: 9781733984478
... Tract; HST = Highstand Systems Tract. Table 8b. Summary of the ages of the principal Upper Zemorrian Sequence depositional and tectonic events. Table 8c. Summary of the ages of the principal Lowermost and Lower Zemorrian sequence depositional and tectonic events. Table 8d...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (2): 429–430.
... zones P15-P17 (about 45-37.5 m.y. ago). Oligocene time is represented approximately by the Zemorrian Stage, defined by Paleogene zones P18-P22 (about 37.5-22.5 m.y. ago). Miocene subdivisions are: early Miocene, Saucesian Stage (Neogene zones N4-N8), radiometric age span about 23–15 m.y. ago; middle...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (7): 1089.
...Weldon W. Rau ABSTRACT Just south of the Olympic Mountains of western Washington, the Refugian stage of Schenck and Kleinpell and the Zemorrian stage of Kleinpell comprise a continuous sequence about 9,000 feet thick. These strata locally constitute the Lincoln Creek Formation, known throughout...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1984
Journal of Paleontology (1984) 58 (3): 718–737.
..., and is equivalent to the early Zemorrian Foraminiferal Stage, which is assigned to the early Oligocene. Liracassis apta is restricted to the Liracassis ["Echinophoria"] apta Molluscan Zone; the molluscan zone is equivalent to the late Zemorrian and early Saucesian Foraminiferal Stages, currently assigned...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1982
AAPG Bulletin (1982) 66 (10): 1688–1689.
...Kenneth L. Finger ABSTRACT An ostracode fauna consisting of 10 new species occurs in the uppermost Zemorrian and lowermost Saucesian sections of the lower Rincon Formation, Los Sauces Creek, Ventura County, California. Paracosta and Buntonia dominate the assemblage, which is also represented...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1977
Journal of Sedimentary Research (1977) 47 (1): 78–88.
... and Zemorrian Stages. A second conglomeratic unit consisting of Zemorrian strata is interpreted to be a channel facies eroded into and emplaced within the underlying Refugian sequence. The two conglomerate-bearing lithofacies grade upward into a fine-grained sandstone and siltstone succession approximately...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1973
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1973) 10 (3): 331–365.
... if the presence of Bulimina schencki fauna will be confirmed.4. The upper part of Division B contains an apparently Lower Blakeley macrofauna suggestive of late Oligocene age in terms of the generally accepted molluskan chronology. The early to mid-Zemorrian (=mid-Oligocene) dating of its foraminifer fauna...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (2): 436.
... at 558 and 561 ft contained Foraminifera indicating a Luisian age. The Relizian was represented by a thickness of about 700 ft. Approximately 1,500 ft of Saucesian age sediments were present. The upper Zemorrian was represented by 190 ft of section. The bottom 900 ft of preponderantly sandstones proved...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (10): 1766.
...W. Thomas Rothwell ABSTRACT Pacific Coast paleontological correlations in the Oligocene have been hindered by misinterpretations of faunas, because of biofacies differences and limited stratigraphic evidence from too few samples. The “lower Zemorrian” is redefined, and the boundary between...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1964
AAPG Bulletin (1964) 48 (5): 670–679.
... adequately studied, resulting in fallacious concepts of its faunas and erroneous correlations. The San Lorenzo Formation has been subdivided into the Twobar Shale Member of Narizian (late Eocene) age and Rices Mudstone Member of Rufugian and Zemorrian (Eocene and Oligocene) age. Faunas and lithology suggest...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1964
AAPG Bulletin (1964) 48 (4): 516.
... for the California Tertiary, representing depths ranging from estuarine to deep bathyal conditions. From Zemorrian to Luisian time, water depths in the San Joaquin marine basin were about 6,000 feet; in later Miocene time there was gradual shoaling, resulting in widespread shallow marine and paralic conditions...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1959
AAPG Bulletin (1959) 43 (1): 257.
... sandstones, siltstones, and mudstones. The sandstones are thicker and cleaner in the upper part of the Butano formation and produce oil in the La Honda field. Conformably overlying the Butano formation are 2,500 feet of San Lorenzo mudstones and siltstones (upper Eocene A-1 zone to lower Zemorrian) which...
Series: GSA Memoirs
Published: 01 March 1957
DOI: 10.1130/MEM67V2-p543
... low gradient. These continental beds interfinger with marine sediments in the vicinity of Gaviota Pass. Marine conditions returned during middle and late Oligocene time (Zemorrian and Saucesian stages), and the fossiliferous Vaqueros sand was deposited over most of the area. From this time to late...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (12): 2634–2635.
... at the base of the Miocene (lower Zemorrian-Salt Creek shale), another at the base of the Saucesian, and the third at the base of the middle Miocene (Gould shale). Production has been established from the Eocene Point of Rocks sand, the only blanket sand across the structure, the Oligocene Oceanic sand...
Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 October 2002
PALAIOS (2002) 17 (5): 527–529.
... been shown to be of earliest Oligocene age (∼33.7–33.0Ma), whereas the type Zemorrian (in Zemorra Creek, southern Temblor Range, California) has been shown to be very short and incomplete, spanning only a short part of the earliest Oligocene(∼33–32Ma) and a short part of the latest Oligocene...