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Stratigraphical Palaeontology : A Manual for Students and Field Geologists

AuthorE. Neaverson
PublisherSarup and Sons
Publisher2005
PublisherReprint
Publisherxiii
Publisher525 p,
Publisherillus
ISBN8176256110

Contents: I. General considerations: 1. Introduction. 2. Morphological features of the chief fossil groups. 3. The preservation and occurrence of fossils. 4. Faunas in relation to habitat. 5. Geographical distribution and migration. 6. Fossils as indices of horizon: I. Plants and invertebrate animals. 7. Fossils as indices or horizon: II. Vertebrate animals. II. Faunas of the geological systems in Britain: 8. Cambrian faunas. 9. Ordovician faunas. 10. Silurian faunas. 11. Devonian faunas. 12. Carboniferous faunas. 13. Palaeozoic land-floras. 14. Permian and Triassic faunas. 15. Early Jurassic faunas. 16. Upper Jurassic faunas. 17. Cretaceous faunas. 18. Post-palaeozoic land-floras. 19. Older tertiary faunas. 20. The newer tertiary fauns. List of genera and species. Index of stratigraphical names.

"The present volume, which makes extensive use of recent investigations, is designed to help the student to use fossils to the best advantage in his geological work. Some palaeontological knowledge is necessarily assumed, but the descriptive terms used in the book are explained in chapter II, while such general considerations as mode of occurrence, habitat, geographical distribution and migration are discussed in succeeding chapters. The second part of the volume contains an account chapters. The second part of the volume contains an account of the faunas of the geological systems as represented in Pritam, and some of the problems which need further investigation are indicated therein. It is hoped that the book, with its numerous illustrations of fossils which are of importance in the field, will prove a serviceable manual to mining and boring engineers, and to field-geologists in general. With regard to illustrations, while photographs have the advantage of accuracy, many fossils are so preserved that drawings or diagrams are necessary to give a clear representation of the essential characters. This volume is, therefore, illustrated by a number of photographs taken from specimens and from drawings in monographs, and further by a series of drawings made, under the author\'s supervision, by Miss Kathleen Ball of the Liverpool School of Art. As a general rule, the figures are arranged so that the older forms appear in the lower part of the page. Some inequality in the illustration of various fossil-groups in necessitated by differences in the use of generic and specific names. For example, such a large genus as Monograptus, which ranges practically throughout a whole system, naturally demands the illustration of a number of species. But in the case of ammonites, of which the genera are now so restricted that almost every one suffices to indicate a small stratal subdivision, a single species is used to illustrate the generic characters." (jacket)

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