Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Other|
September 01, 1985
Fossil plants from the Mauch Chunk Formation of Pennsylvania; morphology of Adiantites antiquus
James R. Jennings
James R. Jennings
South. Ill. Univ., Dep. Geol., Carbondale, IL, United States
Search for other works by this author on:
Journal of Paleontology (1985) 59 (5): 1146–1157.
Article history
first online:
03 Mar 2017
Citation
James R. Jennings; Fossil plants from the Mauch Chunk Formation of Pennsylvania; morphology of Adiantites antiquus. Journal of Paleontology 1985;; 59 (5): 1146–1157. doi:
Download citation file:
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Email alerts
Index Terms/Descriptors
- biostratigraphy
- Carboniferous
- Filicopsida
- Mauch Chunk Formation
- Middle Mississippian
- Mississippian
- Paleozoic
- Pennsylvania
- Plantae
- Pteridophyta
- Schuylkill County Pennsylvania
- stratigraphy
- United States
- Upper Mississippian
- east-central Pennsylvania
- Sharp Mountain
- Pottsville Quadrangle
- Adiantites antiquus
Latitude & Longitude
Citing articles via
Related Articles
A Carboniferous flora from the Surprise Canyon Formation in the Grand Canyon, Arizona
Journal of Paleontology
Related Book Content
Depositional and structural history of the Pennsylvania Anthracite region
Paleoenvironmental and Tectonic Controls in Coal-Forming Basins in the United States
The Fayetteville Flora of Arkansas (USA): A snapshot of terrestrial vegetation patterns within a clastic swamp at Late Mississippian time
Wetlands through Time
A Late Mississippian back-barrier marsh ecosystem in the Black Warrior and Appalachian Basins
Wetlands through Time
Controls of Early Pennsylvanian Sedimentation in Western Pennsylvania
Carboniferous of the Southeastern United States
Plant paleoecology of the Late Devonian Red Hill locality, north-central Pennsylvania, an Archaeopteris-dominated wetland plant community and early tetrapod site
Wetlands through Time
Post-glacial to historic dip-slope rock block slides in the Valley and Ridge province of northeastern Pennsylvania
Landslide processes of the eastern United States and Puerto Rico