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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: A wind-driven numerical model of the Indian Ocean is used to examine the horizontal statistics of hundreds of passive tracers spread evenly over the model domain. The distribution covers several dynamically distinct regions, revealing a variety of Lagrangian behaviours associated with different geographic locations. In particular, a cluster of trajectories with scaling dimension as large as 1.3 exists throughout the equatorial zone. Spectral analysis of trajectory displacements indicates mixed Rossby-gravity waves are involved in the production of some fractal trajectories.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: In this paper we present a review of advances made and problems still existing in the application of the theory of chaos and dynamical systems to time series. In particular we discuss issues pertaining the estimation of dimensions, Lyapunov exponents and nonlinear prediction from an observable. We analyze the problems and discuss proper ways to deal with them.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: A novel application of a technique developed from chaos theory is used in describing seasonal to interannual climate predictability over the Northern Hemisphere (NH). The technique is based on an empirical forecast scheme - local approximation in a reconstructed phase space - for time-series data. Data are monthly 500 hPa heights on a latitude-longitude grid covering the NH from 20° N to the equator. Predictability is estimated based on the linear correlation between actual and predicted heights averaged over a forecast range of one- to twelve.month lead. The method is capable of extracting the major climate signals on this time scale including ENSO and the North Atlantic Oscillation.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: Our intention in this work is to show, by using two different methods, that magnetospheric dynamics reveal low dimensional chaos. In the first method we extend the chaotic analysis for the AE index time series by including singular value decomposition (SVD) analysis in combination with Theiler's test in order to discriminate dynamical chaos from self-affinity or "crinkliness". The estimated fractality of the AE index time series which is obtained belongs to a strange attractor structure with close returns in the reconstructed phase space. In the second method we extend the linear equivalent magnetospheric electric circuit to a nonlinear one, the arithmetic solution of which reveals low dimensional chaotic dynamics. Both methods strongly support the existence of low dimensional magnetospheric chaos.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: Due to the local and global impacts of algae blooms and patchiness on water quality, carbon cycling and climate, models of plankton dynamics are of current interest. In this paper, the temporal and spatial patterns in natural plankton communities are interpreted as transient and stationary nonequilibrium solutions of dynamical nonlinear interaction-diffusion-advection systems. A simple model of phytoplankton-zooplankton dynamics (Scheffer, 1991) is presented in space and time. After summarizing the local properties as multiple stability and oscillations, the emergence of spatial and spatio- temporal patterns is considered, accounting also for diffusion and weak advection. In order to study the emergence and stability of these structures under hydrodynamic forcing, the interaction- diffusion-advection model is coupled to the hydrodynamic equations. It is shown, that the formation of nonequilibrium spatio-temporal density patterns due to the interplay of the deterministic nonlinear biological interactions and physical processes is a rare occurrence in rapidly flowing waters. The two-timing perturbation technique is applied to problems with very rapid single-directed steady flows. A channel under tidal forcing serves as and example for a system with a relatively high detention time of matter. Generally, due to the different time and length scales of planktic interactions, diffusion and transport, initial nonequilibrium plankton patches are simply moved through the system unless the strong hydrodynamic forces do not destroy them before.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: A two dimensional system of autonomous nonlinear ordinary differential equations models glacier growth and temperature changes on an idealized planet. We apply standard perturbative techniques from dynamical systems theory to study small amplitude periodic orbits about a constant equilibrium. The equations are put in cononical form and the local phase space topology is examined. Maximum and minimum periods of oscillation are obtained and related to the radius of the orbit. An adjacent equilibrium is shown to have saddle character and the inflowing and outflowing manifolds of this saddle are studied using numerical integration. The inflowing manifolds show the region of attraction for the periodic orbit. As the frequency gets small, the adjacent (saddle) equilibrium approaches the radius of the periodic orbit. The bifurcation of the periodic orbit to a stable homoclinic orbit is observed when an inflowing manifold and an outflowing manifold of the adjacent equilibrium cross.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: Fractal and occasionally multifractal behaviour has been invoked to characterize (independently of their magnitude) the spatial distribution of seismic epicenters, whereas more recently, the frequency distribution of magnitudes (irrespective of their spatial location) has been considered as a manifestation of Self-Organized Criticality (SOC). In this paper we relate these two aspects on rather general grounds, (i.e. in a model independent way), and further show that this involves a non-classical SOC. We consider the multifractal characteristics of the projection of the space-time seismic process onto the horizontal plane whose values are defined by the measured ground displacements, we show that it satisfies the requirements for a first order multifractal phase transition and by implication for a non-classical SOC. We emphasize the important consequences of the stochastic alternative to the classical (deterministic) SOC.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: A detailed nonlinear time series analysis has been made of two daytime geomagnetic pulsation events being recorded at L'Aquila (Italy, L ≈ 1.6) and Niemegk (Germany, L ≈ 2.3). Grassberger and Procaccia algorithm has been used to investigate the dimensionality of physical processes. Surrogate data test and self affinity (fractal) test have been used to exclude coloured noise with power law spectra. Largest Lyapunow exponents have been estimated using the methods of Wolf et al. The problems of embedding, stability of estimations, spurious correlations and nonlinear noise reduction have also been discussed. The main conclusions of this work, which include some new results on the geomagnetic pulsations, are (1) that the April 26, 1991 event, represented by two observatory time series LAQ1 and NGK1 is probably due to incoherent waves; no finite correlation dimension was found in this case, and (2) that the June 18, 1991 event represented by observatory time series LAQ2 and NGK2, is due to low dimensional nonlinear dynamics, which include deterministic chaos with correlation dimension D2(NGK2) = 2.25 ± 0.05 and D2(NDK2) = 2.02 ± 0.03, and with positive Lyapunov exponents λmax (LAQ2) = 0.055 ± 0.003 bits/s and λmax (NGK2) = 0.052 ± 0.003 bits/s; the predictability time in both cases is ≈ 13 s.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: If climate models produced clouds having liquid water amounts close to those observed, they would compute a mean albedo that is often much too large, due to the treatment of clouds as plane-parallel. An approximate lower-bound for this "plane-parallel albedo bias" may be obtained from a fractal model having a range of optical thicknesses similar to those observed in marine stratocumulus, since they are more nearly plane-parallel than most other cloud types. We review and extend results from a model which produces a distribution of liquid water path having a lognormal-like probability density and a power-law wavenumber spectrum, with parameters determined by stratocumulus observations. As the spectral exponent approaches -1, the simulated cloud approaches a well-known multifractal, referred to as the "singular model", but when the exponent is -5/3, similar to what is observed, the cloud exhibits qualitatively different scaling properties, the socalled "bounded model". The mean albedo for bounded cascade clouds is a function of a fractal parameter, 0
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: We study atmospheric wind turbulence in the framework of universal multifractals, using several medium resolution (10 Hz) time series. We cut these original time series into 704 scale invariant realizations. We then compute the moment scaling exponent of the energy flux K(q) for 4 and 704 realizations, in order to study qualitative difference between strong and weak events associated with multifractal phase transitions. We detect a first order multifractal phase transition of the energy flux at statistical moment of order qD ≈ 2.4 ± 0.2: this means that when the number of realizations increases, moments order q ≥; qD diverge. These results are confirmed by the study of probability distributions, and wind structure functions. A consequence of these findings is that it is no use to compare different cascade models in turbulence by using the high order wind structure functions, because a linear part will always be encountered for high enough order moments. Another important implication for multifractal studies of turbulence is that the asymptotic slope of the scaling moment function is purely a function of sample size and diverges with it; it implies the same for D∞, which has often be considered as finite.
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 1994-12-31
    Description: Shear flow in a stable stratification provides a waveguide for internal gravity waves. In the inviscid approximation, internal gravity waves are known to be unstable below a threshold in Richardson number. However, in a viscous fluid, at low enough Reynolds number, this threshold recedes to Ri = 0. Nevertheless, even the slightest viscosity strongly damps internal gravity waves when the Richardson number is small (shear forces dominate buoyant forces). In this paper we address the dynamics that approximately govern wave propagation when the Richardson number is small and the fluid is viscous. When Ri
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 1994-12-31
    Description: We present a numerical study of the generation and evolution of a mixed layer in a stably stratified layer of Boussinesq fluid. We use an external forcing in the equation of motion to model the experimental situation where the mechanical energy input is due to an oscillating grid. The results of 2D and 3D numerical simulations indicate that the basic mechanism for the entrainment is the advection of the temperature field. This advection tends to produce horizontally thin regions of small temperature vertical gradients (jets) where the hydrodynamics forces are nearly zero. At the bottom of these structures, the buoyancy brakes the vertical motions. The jets are also characterized by the presence of very short horizontal scales where the thermal diffusion time turn out to be comparable with the dynamics time. As a result, the temperature field is well mixed in a few dynamics times. This process stops when the mechanical energy injected becomes comparable with the energy dissipated by viscosity.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: In addition to the bispectral coherence method, phase/time analysis of analytic signals is another promising avenue for the investigation of phase effects in wind waves. Frequency spectra of phase fluctuations obtained from both sea and laboratory experiments follow an F-β power law over several decades, suggesting that a fractal description is appropriate. However, many similar natural phenomena have been shown to be multifractal. Universal multifractals are quantified by two additional parameters: the Lévy index 0 〈 α 〈 2 for the type of multifractal and the co-dimension 0 〈 C1 〈 1 for intermittence. The three parameters are a full statistical measure the nonlinear dynamics. Analysis of laboratory flume data is reported here and the results indicate that the phase fluctuations are 'hard multifractal' (α 〉 1). The actual estimate is close to the limiting value α = 2,  which is consistent with Kolmogorov's lognormal model for turbulent fluctuations. Implications for radar and sonar backscattering from the sea surface are briefly considered.
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: The radiocarbon record that has been extended from 7199 BC to 1891 AD is of fundamental importance to understand century-scale variations of solar activity. We have, therefore, studied how to extract information from dynamic reconstructions of this observational record. Using some rather unusual methods of nonlinear dynamics, we have found that the data are significantly different from linear coloured noise and that there is some evidence of nonlinear behaviour. The method of recurrence plots exhibits that the grand minima of solar activity are quite different in their recurrence. Most remarkably, it suggests that the recent epoch seems to be similar to the Medieval maximum.
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: We empirically investigate the scaling behaviour of the horizontal wind along the vertical direction using 287 radiosonde soundings with a resolution of 50 m. We compare the results obtained with those of the horizontal temporal behaviour in the framework of Generalized Scaling Invariance and the unified Scaling model of atmospheric dynamics. We find the scaling to be very well respected over the range 50 m - 13 km (nearly the entire troposphere) and we estimate the universal multifractal indices which characterize the statistics in the vertical. By comparing our result with those obtained in the horizontal we show that the degree of stratification is different for mean and extreme structures. Finally, we theoretically discuss the necessary improvements to the Unified Multifractal model needed to account for them.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: Theoretical calculations, simulations and measurements of rotation of earthquake focal mechanisms suggest that the stress in earthquake focal zones follows the Cauchy distribution which is one of the stable probability distributions (with the value of the exponent α equal to 1). We review the properties of the stable distributions and show that the Cauchy distribution is expected to approximate the stress caused by earthquakes occurring over geologically long intervals of a fault zone development. However, the stress caused by recent earthquakes recorded in instrumental catalogues, should follow symmetric stable distributions with the value of α significantly less than one. This is explained by a fractal distribution of earthquake hypocentres: the dimension of a hypocentre set, δ, is close to zero for short-term earthquake catalogues and asymptotically approaches 2¼ for long-time intervals. We use the Harvard catalogue of seismic moment tensor solutions to investigate the distribution of incremental static stress caused by earthquakes. The stress measured in the focal zone of each event is approximated by stable distributions. In agreement with theoretical considerations, the exponent value of the distribution approaches zero as the time span of an earthquake catalogue (ΔT) decreases. For large stress values α increases. We surmise that it is caused by the δ increase for small inter-earthquake distances due to location errors.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: There is considerable evidence in support of Milankovic's theory that variations in high-latitude summer insolation caused by Earth orbital variations are the cause of the Pleistocene ice cycles. The enigmatic discrepancy between the spectra of Milankovic forcing and of Pleistocene climate variations is believed to be resolved by the slow, nonlinear response of ice sheets to changes in solar seasonality. An experiment with a preliminary version of a 14-region atmosphere/snow/upper ocean climate model demonstrates that the response of the ocean-atmosphere system alone to Milankovic forcing is capable of driving ice cycles with the observed spectrum. This occurs because of the highly nonlinear response of both the thermal seasons and the annual mean temperature to solar seasons, which is caused in turn by the highly nonlinear feedback between temperature and snow and sea ice.
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: This is the first issue of a new scientific publication of the European Geophysical Society, which will serve as the official organ of the Section on Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics. At the General Assembly in Strasbourg, 1987, this Section started with a special Joint Symposium on "Computer Simulations in Fluid Dynamics - Earth, Atmosphere and Space Plasmas" with 8 contributions. This was followed, a year later in Bologna, by a Joint Symposium entitled "Chaos and Turbulence in Geophysics" with 20 contributions. Since then the group of "nonlinear" scientists within the EGS has grown rapidly in size and in the quality of its contributions presented at the General Assemblies of the Society. Nowadays the programme of this Section normally includes 10 or more independent sessions with a total of some 250-300 papers. This development encouraged the officers and the members of the Section to search for a journal of their own, rather than to distribute their papers in the "classical" journals ranging from solid Earth geophysics to planetary and space sciences. Originally, the Society was asked to join an already existing publication in the field of nonlinear sciences. After almost two years of negotiations with the editors and the publishers of the most accepted journals in the field, the Section members decided differently; namely to launch their own journal, preferentially with a well known European publisher. However, in view of the general decrease in financial support for science and the generally increasing overheads of the publishers, it was decided that the new journal should be published by the Society itself, as an independent publication owned and run only by the EGS. The Society and the editors of this new journal are pleased to offer a modern, international, interdisciplinary and refereed publication to a young and growing generation of geophysicists with no page charges and fast publication on a "first come - first published" basis. The subscription rates are modest both for libraries and for members of the Society. We hope that scientists from other disciplines will also enjoy reading this journal and that publishing in it will be rewarding for the authors. With best wishes, Dr. Arne K. Richter Executive Secretary
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: The equations describing the interaction of long inertio-gravity (IG) waves with the Rossby waves are derived. Due to remarkable cancellations, the interaction is shown to be anomalously weak. As a result, an inverse cascade of turbulence produces wave condensate of large amplitude so that wave breaking with front creation can occur.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 1994-12-31
    Description: We consider Hamiltonian description of weakly nonlinear wave dynamics in unstable and nonequilibrium media. We construct the appropriate canonical variables in the whole wavenumber space. The essentially new element is the construction of canonical variables in a vicinity of marginally stable points where two normal modes coalesce. The commonly used normal variables are not appropriate in this domain. The mater is that the approximation of weak nonlinearity breaks down when the dynamical system is written in terms of these variables. In this case we introduce the canonical variables based on the linear combination of modes belonging to the two different branches of dispersion curve. As an example of one of the possible applications of presented results the evolution equations for weakly nonlinear wave packets in the marginally stable area are derived. These equations cannot be derived if we deal with the commonly used normal variables.
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: Using finite data sets and limited size of study volumes may result in significant spurious effects when estimating the scaling properties of various physical processes. These effects are examined with an example featuring the spatial distribution of induced seismic activity in Creighton Mine (northern Ontario, Canada). The events studied in the present work occurred during a three-month period, March-May 1992, within a volume of approximate size 400 x 400 x 180 m3. Two sets of microearthquake locations are studied: Data Set 1 (14,338 events) and Data Set 2 (1654 events). Data Set 1 includes the more accurately located events and amounts to about 30 per cent of all recorded data. Data Set 2 represents a portion of the first data set that is formed by the most accurately located and the strongest microearthquakes. The spatial distribution of events in the two data sets is examined for scaling behaviour using the method of generalized correlation integrals featuring various moments q. From these, generalized correlation dimensions are estimated using the slope method. Similar estimates are made for randomly generated point sets using the same numbers of events and the same study volumes as for the real data. Uniform and monofractal random distributions are used for these simulations. In addition, samples from the real data are randomly extracted and the dimension spectra for these are examined as well. The spectra for the uniform and monofractal random generations show spurious multifractality due only to the use of finite numbers of data points and limited size of study volume. Comparing these with the spectra of dimensions for Data Set 1 and Data Set 2 allows us to estimate the bias likely to be present in the estimates for the real data. The strong multifractality suggested by the spectrum for Data Set 2 appears to be largely spurious; the spatial distribution, while different from uniform, could originate from a monofractal process. The spatial distribution of microearthquakes in Data Set 1 is either monofractal as well, or only weakly multifractal. In all similar studies, comparisons of result from real data and simulated point sets may help distinguish between genuine and artificial multifractality, without necessarily resorting to large number of data.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 1994-12-31
    Description: Assuming that the behaviour of a nonlinear stochastic system can be described by a Markovian diffusion approximation and that the evolution equations can be reduced to a system of ordinary differential equations, a method for the calculation of prediction time is developed. In this approach, the prediction time depends upon the accuracy of prediction, the intensity of turbulence, the accuracy of the initial conditions, the physics contained in the mathematical model, the measurement errors, and the number of prediction variables. A numerical application to zonal channel flow illustrates the theory. Some possible generalizations of the theory are also discussed.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: A unique set of coutemporaneous satellite-tracked drifters and five-day composite Advanced Very High Resolution Radionmeter (AVHRR) satellite imagery of the North Atlantic has been analyzed to examine the surface flow structure of the Gulf Stream. The study region was divided into two sections, greater than 37° N and less than 37° N, in order to answer the question of geographic variability. Fractal and spectral analyses methods were applied to the data. Fractal analysis of the Lagrangian trajectories showed a fractal dimension of 1.21 + 0.02 with a scaling range of 83 - 343 km. The fractal dimension of the temperature fronts of the composite imagery is similar for the two regions with D = 1.11 + 0.01 over a scaling range of 4 - 44 km. Spectral analysis also reports a fairly consistent value for the spectral slope and its scaling range. Therefore, we conclude there is no geographic variability in the data set. A suitable scaling range for this contemporaneous data set is 80 - 200 km which is consistent with the expected physical conditions in the region. Finally, we address the idea of using five-day composite imagery to infer the surface flow of the Gulf Stream. Close analyses of the composite thermal fronts and the Lagrangian drifter trajectories show that the former is not a good indicator of the latter.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 1994-12-31
    Description: The nonlinear dynamics of cnoidal waves, within the context of the general N-cnoidal wave solutions of the periodic Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) and Kadomtsev-Petvishvilli (KP) equations, are considered. These equations are important for describing the propagation of small-but-finite amplitude waves in shallow water; the solutions to KdV are unidirectional while those of KP are directionally spread. Herein solutions are constructed from the 0-function representation of their appropriate inverse scattering transform formulations. To this end a general theorem is employed in the construction process: All solutions to the KdV and KP equations can be written as the linear superposition of cnoidal waves plus their nonlinear interactions. The approach presented here is viewed as significant because it allows the exact construction of N degree-of-freedom cnoidal wave trains under rather general conditions.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 1994-03-31
    Description: This paper presents an analysis of WOCE/TOGA surface drifter paths and its interpretation in conjunction with the west Pacific warm pool water motion. Our interest here lies in the existence of scale invariance in the observed data sets. The analysis proceeds by detecting scale invariance in the drifter paths data, and interpreting the invariance in terms of the statistical second order moment. The range of constant scaling exponent was found to be between 5 days and 10 days, and this range corresponded with the "long tail" of the temporal correlation function in the zonal direction. Velocity covariances in both the zonal and meridional directions were computed, and corresponding diffusivities were 8100 m2/sec meridionally and 41000 m2/sec zonally. Considering the existence of large scale mean flow, it is thought that self-similar energy cascade processes associated with constant scaling exponent may be responsible for the anomalous zonal diffusivity, while the meridional diffusivity may be approximated by ordinary Brownian processes. We suggest that the scale invariance of the WOCE/TOGA surface drifter paths may be a manifestation of energy cascade processes from large scale mean flow to smaller scale irregular flow that is represented by fractional Brownian motion in the zonal direction.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: We present an overview and some new results on anomalous diffusion of passive scalar in turbulent flows (including those used by Richardson in his famous paper in 1926). The obtained results are based on the analysis of the properties of invariant quantities (energy, enstrophy, dissipation, enstrophy generation, helicity density, etc.) - i.e. independent of the choice of the system of reference as the most appropriate to describe physical processes - in three different turbulent laboratory flows (grid-flow, jet and boundary layer, see Tsinober et al. (1992) and Kit et al. (1993). The emphasis is made on the relations between the asymptotic properties of the intermittency exponents of higher order moments of different turbulent fields (energy, dissipation, helicity, spontaneous breaking of isotropy and reflexional symmetry) and the variability of turbulent diffusion in the atmospheric boundary layer, in the troposphere and in the stratosphere. It is argued that local spontaneous breaking of isotropy of turbulent flow results in anomalous scaling laws for turbulent diffusion (as compared to the scaling law of Richardson) which are observed, as a rule, in different atmospheric layers from the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) to the stratosphere. Breaking of rotational symmetry is important in the ABL, whereas reflexional symmetry breaking is dominating in the troposphere locally and in the stratosphere globally. The results are of speculative nature and further analysis is necessary to validate or disprove the claims made, since the correspondence with the experimental results may occur for the wrong reasons as happens from time to time in the field of turbulence.
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: 1. The conference The third conference on "Nonlinear VAriability in Geophysics: scaling and multifractal processes" (NVAG 3) was held in Cargese, Corsica, Sept. 10-17, 1993. NVAG3 was joint American Geophysical Union Chapman and European Geophysical Society Richardson Memorial conference, the first specialist conference jointly sponsored by the two organizations. It followed NVAG1 (Montreal, Aug. 1986), NVAG2 (Paris, June 1988; Schertzer and Lovejoy, 1991), five consecutive annual sessions at EGS general assemblies and two consecutive spring AGU meeting sessions. As with the other conferences and workshops mentioned above, the aim was to develop confrontation between theories and experiments on scaling/multifractal behaviour of geophysical fields. Subjects covered included climate, clouds, earthquakes, atmospheric and ocean dynamics, tectonics, precipitation, hydrology, the solar cycle and volcanoes. Areas of focus included new methods of data analysis (especially those used for the reliable estimation of multifractal and scaling exponents), as well as their application to rapidly growing data bases from in situ networks and remote sensing. The corresponding modelling, prediction and estimation techniques were also emphasized as were the current debates about stochastic and deterministic dynamics, fractal geometry and multifractals, self-organized criticality and multifractal fields, each of which was the subject of a specific general discussion. The conference started with a one day short course of multifractals featuring four lectures on a) Fundamentals of multifractals: dimension, codimensions, codimension formalism, b) Multifractal estimation techniques: (PDMS, DTM), c) Numerical simulations, Generalized Scale Invariance analysis, d) Advanced multifractals, singular statistics, phase transitions, self-organized criticality and Lie cascades (given by D. Schertzer and S. Lovejoy, detailed course notes were sent to participants shortly after the conference). This was followed by five days with 8 oral sessions and one poster session. Overall, there were 65 papers involving 74 authors. In general, the main topics covered are reflected in this special issue: geophysical turbulence, clouds and climate, hydrology and solid earth geophysics. In addition to AGU and EGS, the conference was supported by the International Science Foundation, the Centre Nationale de Recherche Scientifique, Meteo-France, the Department of Energy (US), the Commission of European Communities (DG XII), the Comite National Francais pour le Programme Hydrologique International, the Ministere de l'Enseignement Superieur et de la Recherche (France). We thank P. Hubert, Y. Kagan, Ph. Ladoy, A. Lazarev, S.S. Moiseev, R. Pierrehumbert, F. Schmitt and Y. Tessier, for help with the organization of the conference. However special thanks goes to A. Richter and the EGS office, B. Weaver and the AGU without whom this would have been impossible. We also thank the Institut d' Etudes Scientifiques de Cargese whose beautiful site was much appreciated, as well as the Bar des Amis whose ambiance stimulated so many discussions. 2. Tribute to L.F. Richardson With NVAG3, the European geophysical community paid tribute to Lewis Fry Richardson (1881-1953) on the 40th anniversary of his death. Richardson was one of the founding fathers of the idea of scaling and fractality, and his life reflects the European geophysical community and its history in many ways. Although many of Richardson's numerous, outstanding scientific contributions to geophysics have been recognized, perhaps his main contribution concerning the importance of scaling and cascades has still not received the attention it deserves. Richardson was the first not only to suggest numerical integration of the equations of motion of the atmosphere, but also to attempt to do so by hand, during the First World War. This work, as well as a presentation of a broad vision of future developments in the field, appeared in his famous, pioneering book "Weather prediction by numerical processes" (1922). As a consequence of his atmospheric studies, the nondimensional number associated with fluid convective stability has been called the "Richardson number". In addition, his book presents a study of the limitations of numerical integration of these equations, it was in this book that - through a celebrated poem - that the suggestion that turbulent cascades were the fundamental driving mechanism of the atmosphere was first made. In these cascades, large eddies break up into smaller eddies in a manner which involves no characteristic scales, all the way from the planetary scale down to the viscous scale. This led to the Richardson law of turbulent diffusion (1926) and tot he suggestion that particles trajectories might not be describable by smooth curves, but that such trajectories might instead require highly convoluted curves such as the Peano or Weierstrass (fractal) curves for their description. As a founder of the cascade and scaling theories of atmospheric dynamics, he more or less anticipated the Kolmogorov law (1941). He also used scaling ideas to invent the "Richardson dividers method" of successively increasing the resolution of fractal curves and tested out the method on geographical boundaries (as part of his wartime studies). In the latter work he anticipated recent efforts to study scale invariance in rivers and topography. His complex life typifies some of the hardships that the European scientific community has had to face. His educational career is unusual: he received a B.A. degree in physics, mathematics, chemistry, biology and zoology at Cambridge University, and he finally obtained his Ph.D. in mathematical psychology at the age of 47 from the University of London. As a conscientious objector he was compelled to quit the United Kingdom Meteorological Office in 1920 when the latter was militarized by integration into the Air Ministry. He subsequently became the head of a physics department and the principal of a college. In 1940, he retired to do research on war, which was published posthumously in book form (Richardson, 1963). This latter work is testimony to the trauma caused by the two World Wars and which led some scientists including Richardson to use their skills in rational attempts to eradicate the source of conflict. Unfortunately, this remains an open field of research. 3. The contributions in this special issue Perhaps the area of geophysics where scaling ideas have the longest history, and where they have made the largest impact in the last few years, is turbulence. The paper by Tsinober is an example where geometric fractal ideas are used to deduce corrections to standard dimensional analysis results for turbulence. Based on local spontaneous breaking of isotropy of turbulent flows, the fractal notion is used in order to deduce diffusion laws (anomalous with respect to the Richardson law). It is argued that his law is ubiquitous from the atmospheric boundary layer to the stratosphere. The asymptotic intermittency exponent i hypothesized to be not only finite but to be determined by the angular momentum flux. Schmitt et al., Chigirinskaya et al. and Lazarev et al. apply statistical multifractal notions to atmospheric turbulence. In the former, the formal analogy between multifractals and thermodynamics is exploited, in particular to confirm theoretical predictions that sample-size dependent multifractal phase transitions occur. While this quantitatively explains the behavior of the most extreme turbulent events, it suggests that - contrary to the type of multifractals most commonly discussed in the literature which are bounded - more violent (unbounded) multifractals are indeed present in the atmospheric wind field. Chigirinskaya et al. use a tropical rather than mid-latitude set to study the extreme fluctuations form yet another angle: That of coherent structures, which, in the multifractal framework, are identified with singularities of various orders. The existence of a critical order of singularity which distinguishes violent "self-organized critical structures" was theoretically predicted ten years ago; here it is directly estimated. The second of this two part series (Lazarev et al.) investigates yet another aspect of tropical atmospheric dynamics: the strong multiscaling anisotropy. Beyond the determination of universal multifractal indices and critical singularities in the vertical, this enables a comparison to be made with Chigirinskaya et al.'s horizontal results, requiring an extension of the unified scaling model of atmospheric dynamics. Other approaches to the problem of geophysical turbulence are followed in the papers by Pavlos et al., Vassiliadis et al., Voros et al. All of them share a common assumption that a very small number of degrees of freedom (deterministic chaos) might be sufficient for characterizing/modelling the systems under consideration. Pavlos et al. consider the magnetospheric response to solar wind, showing that scaling occurs both in real space (using spectra), and also in phase space; the latter being characterized by a correlation dimension. The paper by Vassiliadis et al. follows on directly by investigating the phase space properties of power-law filtered and rectified gaussian noise; the results further quantify how low phase space correlation dimensions can occur even with very large number of degrees of freedom (stochastic) processes. Voros et al. analyze time series of geomagnetic storms and magnetosphere pulsations, also estimating their correlation dimensions and Lyapounov exponents taking special care of the stability of the estimates. They discriminate low dimensional events from others, which are for instance attributed to incoherent waves. While clouds and climate were the subject of several talks at the conference (including several contributions on multifractal clouds), Cahalan's contribution is the only one in this special issue. Addressing the fundamental problem of the relationship of horizontal cloud heterogeneity and the related radiation fields, he first summarizes some recent numerical results showing that even for comparatively thin clouds that fractal heterogeneity will significantly reduce the albedo. The model used for the distribution of cloud liquid water is the monofractal "bounded cascade" model, whose properties are also outlined. The paper by Falkovich addresses another problem concerning the general circulation: the nonlinear interaction of waves. By assuming the existence of a peak (i.e. scale break) at the inertial oscillation frequency, it is argued that due to remarkable cancellations, the interactions between long inertio-gravity waves and Rossby waves are anomalously weak, producing a "wave condensate" of large amplitude so that wave breaking with front creation can occur. Kagan et al., Eneva and Hooge et al. consider fractal and multifractal behaviour in seismic events. Eneva estimates multifractal exponents of the density of micro-earthquakes induced by mining activity. The effects of sample limitations are discussed, especially in order to distinguish between genuine from spurious multifractal behaviour. With the help of an analysis of the CALNET catalogue, Hooge et al. points out, that the origin of the celebrated Gutenberg-Richter law could be related to a non-classical Self-Organized Criticality generated by a first order phase transition in a multifractal earthquake process. They also analyze multifractal seismic fields which are obtained by raising earthquake amplitudes to various powers and summing them on a grid. In contrast, Kagan, analyzing several earthquake catalogues discussed the various laws associated with earthquakes. Giving theoretical and empirical arguments, he proposes an additive (monofractal) model of earthquake stress, emphasizing the relevance of (asymmetric) stable Cauchy probability distributions to describe earthquake stress distributions. This would yield a linear model for self-organized critical earthquakes. References: Kolmogorov, A.N.: Local structure of turbulence in an incompressible liquid for very large Reynolds number, Proc. Acad. Sci. URSS Geochem. Sect., 30, 299-303, 1941. Perrin, J.: Les Atomes, NRF-Gallimard, Paris, 1913. Richardson, L.F.: Weather prediction by numerical process. Cambridge Univ. Press 1922 (republished by Dover, 1965). Richardson, L.F.: Atmospheric diffusion on a distance neighbour graph. Proc. Roy. of London A110, 709-737, 1923. Richardson, L.F.: The problem of contiguity: an appendix of deadly quarrels. General Systems Yearbook, 6, 139-187, 1963. Schertzer, D., Lovejoy, S.: Nonlinear Variability in Geophysics, Kluwer, 252 pp, 1991.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 1994-12-31
    Description: We present exploratory analogies and speculations on the mechanisms underlying the organization of faulting and earthquake in the earth crust. The mechanical properties of the brittle lithosphere at scales of the order or larger than a few kilometers are proposed to be analogous to those of non-cohesive granular media, since both systems present stress amplitudes controlled by gravity, and shear band (faulting) localization is determined by a type of friction Mohr-Coulomb rupture criterion. here, we explore the implications of this correspondence with respect to the origin of tectonic and earthquake complexity, on the basis of the existing experimental data on granular media available in the mechanical literature. An important observation is that motions and deformations of non-cohesive granular media are characterized by important fluctuations both in time (sudden breaks, avalanches, which are analogous to earthquakes) and space (strain localizations, yield surfaces forming sometimes complex patterns). This is in apparent contradiction with the conventional wisdom in mechanics, based on the standard tendency to homogenize, which has led to dismiss fluctuations as experimental noise. On the basis of a second analogy with spinglasses and neural networks, based on the existence of block and grain packing disorder and block rotation "frustration", we suggest that these fluctuations observed both at large scales and at the block scale constitute an intrinsic signature of the mechanics of granular media. The space-time complexity observed in faulting and earthquake phenomenology is thus proposed to result form the special properties of the mechanics of granular media, dominated by the "frustration" of the kinematic deformations of its constitutive blocks.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: Input-output systems are characterized by applying time series analysis techniques developed for autonomous systems to the input and the output time series separately and using the results as nonlinear statistics of the time series distributions. Two examples are presented using the correlation integral as a nonlinear statistic: the first one examines the change in the statistic when several sample input time series are passed through a nonlinear filter. The rectifier is chosen as the filter because it models, at first approximation, the effect of dayside magnetospheric reconnection to the interplanetary magnetic field and solar wind input. The changes in the correlation integral are used to characterize the filter response. A second example compares a linear filter of the rectified solar wind input to the observed auroral geomagnetic activity in terms of their correlation integrals. Implications for models of the solar wind-magneto- sphere coupling are discussed.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 1994-09-30
    Description: In this paper we test the Unified Mulifractal model of atmospheric dynamics in the tropics. In the first part, we empirically investigate the scaling behaviour along the horizontal, in the second part along the vertical. Here we concentrate on the presentation of basic multifractal notions and techniques and on how they give rise to self-organized critical structures. Indeed, we point out a rather simple and clear characterisation of these structures which may help to clarify both the nature of the oft-cited coherent structures and the generation of cyclones. Using 30 aircraft series of horizontal wind and temperature, we find rather remarkable constancy of the three universal multifractal indices H, C1 and α as well as the value of critical exponents qD, γD associated with multifractal phase transitions and self-organized critical structures. This constancy extends not only from wind tunnel and mid-latitude to the tropics, but also to multifractals generated by Navier-Stokes like equations.
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: Four new species of the ostracod genus Neosinocythere are described from the Indo-West Pacific region: N. indica, N. macropunctata, N. micropunctata and N. indowestpacifica. The diagnoses of Neosinocythere and the subfamily Sinocytherinae Huang are emended.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: A newly-discovered Konservat-Lagerstätte in the Upper Ordovician of South Africa has yielded giant conodont apparatuses, some of which are associated with preserved soft tissues of the conodont animals. Lobate structures located to the anterior of the conodont apparatus in several specimens are interpreted as sclerotic cartilages surrounding the eyes, comparing closely with those of the Silurian agnathan Jamoytius. One specimen also displays a possible trunk trace.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: It is shown that the genus Chiasmolithus as currently understood comprises two discrete lineages. It is proposed that these should be formally recognised as separate genera. A new genus, Sullivania, is described and ten new combinations: S. californica, S. consueta, S. danica, S. edwardsii, S. gigas, S. inconspicua, S. minima, S. nitida, S. titus and Cruciplacolithus oulchyensis are introduced. The speculative evolution in the genera Cruciplacolithus, Sullivania and Chiasmolithus is discussed and illustrated.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Sediments of the Kunga and Maude groups (Early Norian-Aalenian) from the Queen Charlotte Islands, British Columbia, have yielded the first records of early Mesozoic calcareous nannofossils in North America. These occurrences are the only record of Triassic nannofossils away from the recent discoveries in the Tethyan area (Austria, Indonesia, and the northwestern Australian margin). The nannofossil assemblages from the Queen Charlotte Islands are generally poor to moderately preserved, with species diversities typical for this time interval (2–10 species). The assemblages are comparable to those from northwest Europe, for the Lower Jurassic, and to those from Austria, Indonesia, and the Australian margin, for the Upper Triassic. They show compatible stratigraphical ranges, allowing the application of existing biostratigraphical zonations. Palaeobiogeographical interpretations are inconclusive and fail to positively confirm a low latitude (Tethyan) position for the Queen Charlotte Islands, as indicated by macrofossil data. However, Triassic nannofossil assemblages have yet to be described from high palaeolatitude locations. In addition, certain features of the Lower Jurassic assemblages may indicate Tethyan affinities but also distinguish these assemblages from those which have been previously documented. These features include the absence of Schizosphaerella punctulata, which occurs abundantly in the circum-Mediterranean region and was previously thought to be “cosmopolitan” in distribution; and the absence of Mitrolithus jansae which characterizes “Tethyan” assemblages in the circum-Mediterranean area. The Queen Charlotte Islands results are compared with new nannofossil data from Argentina, Timor and North America.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 1991-12-01
    Description: INTRODUCTIONThe application of palynomorphs in well-site dating and correlation within the Upper Cretaceous—Danian Chalk Group of the North Sea, is currently being investigated at the Geological Survey of Denmark. Due to the relatively low abundance of palynomorphs in the chalks, a large sample size (100–300g) is often needed to obtain representative microfloras. Palynological preparation of large chalk samples does, however, create processing problems, especially if the samples derive from oil bearing intervals. The aim of this note is to describe a method developed at the Geological Survey of Denmark to overcome these processing problems.PROBLEMS IN THE PREPARATION OF LARGE CHALK SAMPLES.The problems during the preparation process comprise the following factors: The dissolution of carbonates from 100—300g sized chalk samples with hydrochloric acid causes a vigorous reaction that developes vast amounts of foam. The foam development is usually controlled by spraying alcohol or the more hazardous acetone into the reaction vessel; these solvents reduce the vigorous expansion of the foam by reducing the surface tension of the acid. This procedure, however, demands constant surveillance of the acid treatment, because the effect of the solvents is of short duration. Furthermore, the initial vigorous reaction restricts the use of stronger, more effective hydrofluoric acid concentrations to later parts of the acid treatment process, where the reaction is more calm. In the Danish sector of the North Sea, the main producing reservoir is situated in the Chalk Group. Core samples from the Chalk Group are therefore usually usually oil bearing . . .
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: INTRODUCTIONIn May 1989 a British Micropalaeontological Society Symposium Meeting was held at the University of East Anglia under the title “Cenozoic Biostratigraphy and Global Change”. Fourteen lectures were given on this theme, many of them originating from investigations of DSDP/IPOD and ODP (Ocean Drilling Program) samples. All addressed the potential of micropalaeontological observations for interpreting the history of global and regional oceanographic and climatic change. Many results of this type of investigation are currently appearing in science journals such as “Paleoceanography” and “Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology” as well as in the “Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program”. British micropalaeontologists are taking an active part in this research, but relatively few of the resultant papers have so far appeared in the Journal of Micropalaeontology.Many of the lectures given at the May 1989 Symposium represented work already recently published, or due to be subsequently published in the Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program. Four papers, representing ongoing research not then due to be published, have been brought together here as a small thematic set, illustrating a variety of approaches to “Cenozoic Biostratigraphy and Global Change”. They range across Ostracoda, Coccolithophorida, Planktonic and Benthic Foraminifera, through the entire Cenozoic, including the latest Quaternary, and they include results from both the North Atlantic and Pacific oceans.TITLES“Global Change and the Biostratigraphy of North Atlantic Cenozoic deep water Ostracoda” - Robin C. Whatley and Graham P. Coles.“Palaeoclimatic control of Upper Pliocene Discoaster assemblages in the North Atlantic” - Alex. Chepstow-Lusty, Jan Backman. . .
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 1994-09-01
    Description: Seventy-eight ostracod species belonging to 38 genera are recognized from the late Miocene Fujikotogawa Formation (c. 7–8 Ma), 40 km NE of Akita City, northern Japan. Some 30–40% of the ostracod species belong to the cold water groups (circumpolar and cryophilic species) reported from Plio-Pleistocene formations yielding the Omma-Manganji Fauna, the name given by Otuka (1939) to the Pliocene Japanese cold water molluscan fauna. This study demonstrates that most ostracod species distinguished in deposits yielding the Omma-Manganji Fauna had already appeared in the late Miocene. At least 13 of the ostracod species have been reported from both the Arctic and northern Atlantic Oceans, implying migration from the Pacific to the northern Atlantic through the Arctic after the Bering Strait had been breached. The 13 circumpolar, nine cryophilic and four endemic cold water species are illustrated, with brief taxonomic notes.
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 1993-12-01
    Description: One genus and six new species of ostracodes are described from the Bateque Formation on the Pacific Coast of Baja California Sur, Mexico. Planktonic foraminifers indicate a mid Eocene age and the whole assemblage is characteristic of a shallow warm-water environment. Paijenborchella mezquitalensis sp. nov. is the second record of the genus Paijenborchella from the Eocene of North America. Except for this species and the new genus Bajacythere, the ostracode association has strong affinities with those described from the lower Tertiary Gulf Coast region.
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 1993-12-01
    Description: Collections of discrete conodont elements from the Upper Whitcliffe Formation of the Welsh Borderland indicate a septimembrate plan for the feeding apparatus of Coryssognathus, comprising Pa, Pb, Pc, M, Sa/Sb, Sb and Sc elements. Each element is paired, and relative frequencies suggest that there was a total of 16 elements in the apparatus, including two indistinguishable pairs of Sc elements. Associated small coniform elements appear to represent discrete denticles of crown tissue that were sequentially incorporated into multidenticulate elements during ontogeny.
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 1994-12-01
    Description: Dinoflagellate cysts (dinocysts) are abundant in the Eocene of the North Sea and provide a high-resolution biostratigraphic zonation. Twelve species are erected to accommodate zonal markers that have not been previously described. These are Areosphaeridium ebdonii, Areosphaeridium michoudii, Cerebrocysta magna, Diphyes brevispinum, Diphyes pseudoficusoides, Hystrichosphaeropsis costae, Hystrichostrogylon clausenii, Membranilarnacia compressa, Phthanoperidinium clithridium, Phthanoperidinium distinctum, Phthanoperidinium powellii and Phthanoperidinium regalis.
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 1993-12-01
    Description: In 1957, Grékoff described Metacypris pustulosa trom the Loia Formation originally assigned to the “Wealden” but subsequently dated of Albian age (Maheshwari et al. 1977) of Central Zaire. This species is characterized by its small size (about 0.6 mm long), the surface of the carapace covered by numerous small hemisphaerical pustulae and the presence of two two subvertical sulci.In the original description, Grékoff compared this species with Metacyrpis consobrina Jones, 1893 from the Bear River Formation also of Albian age of Wyoming (U.S.A.). Later, in 1961 and 1962, Pinto & Sanguinetti considered Metacypris pustulosa as a junior synonym of Metacypris consobrina . The type-material of Metacypris consobrina was restudied and illustrated by Colin & Danielopol (1981: Pl. 14, figs. 1–4). This species shows striking similarities with Metacypris pustulosa: small size, similar shape and same micro-pustulose ornamentation. It nevertheless differs from the African species by the presence of a single and weak subvertical sulcus. Recent examination of material from the Albian of Central Zaire (Colin, in press) allowed to clearly demonstrate the presence of the two sulci which were mentioned by Grékoff in the original diagnosis but are not visible on the illustrations. The general morphology, size, omamentation and the presence of the two sulci lead us to transfer this species to the genus Frambocythere Colin, 1980 (in Colin & Danielopol, 1980) and therefore to the “Kovalevskiella lineage” (Colin & Danielopol 1980). It is worth mentioning that in 1965, Danielopol already suggested affinities beteween these forms and the genus Kovalevskiella . . .
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Ontogenetic development of the pore-systems of two species of Loxoconcha, phytal L. japonica and bottom-dwelling L. uranouchiensis, were examined. Adult pore-systems differ between the two species in number and distribution of “smooth”-type bristles, the basal structure of “twisted”-type bristles and the existence of microhairs. These specific features start to differentiate after the A-2 or A-3 juvenile stage, a fairly late moulting stage, and continue to differentiate until the adult stage. These characters are identified as lower phylogenetic ones based on the ontogeny-phylogeny relationship. The result is consistent with the estimate that the characters were regarded as adaptive and specialized through the consideration of their function to the respective habitats. The mode of increase of the two types of pore-systems was revealed. The “twisted”-type bristle, whose number is common between the two species at all stages, reaches the final number, except for one, at the A-3 juvenile stage. In contrast, the “smooth”-type bristle continues to increase in number until adult stage, and, as mentioned above, the specific differences become more obvious as the moulting stages advance. This type of pore-system is valuable for specific differentiation. Two types of pore-system that differ from each other in the pattern of increase were recognized in other ostracod taxa. The two types of pore-systems have different significance in ostracod taxonomy and the recognition of the type is indispensable for future taxonomy.
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The endemic genus Sanyuania, one of the most important elements of the Cainozoic brackish water faunas unique to China, is redescribed, and 3 new species, S. wangi, S. cuneata and S. sublaevis are established, based on Quaternary material from the eastern coast of China. The evolution of the genus is discussed and a general trend involving a reduction in the strength of carapace ornamentation with time is established, as is a general migration seawards exhibited by subsequent chronological species.
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: The main evolutionary trends in the nummulites are briefly summarised and the value of certain morphological characters in species discrimination are summarised. The degree of interdependence of each morphological character on all other characters is assessed and the characters are weighted in order of importance. Environmental and ontogenetic effects on each character are then reviewed and the characters reweighted in order of importance.
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: A foraminiferal species, Planularia kintradwellensis sp. nov., previously left in open nomenclature, is shown to have a useful short stratigraphical range. It has been recovered from several onshore sites within the UK and only from the Lower Kimmeridgian.
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Following the May 1992 meeting in Dijon, which initiated an international project on the “Sequence Stratigraphy of European Basins”, it seems an appropriate time to consider the contribution micropalaeontology can make to the science of sequence stratigraphy. In this short note, we assume that readers are familiar with sequence stratigraphic terminology; if not, see Van Wagoner et al. (1988).WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES FACING SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHY?Demonstrating global eustatic sea-level change. We accept that the basic sequence stratigraphy model put forward by Peter Vail and his colleagues (see Van Wagoner et al., 1988 for a summary) is a powerful tool for describing many sedimentary successions, and that the associated eustatic sea-level curve (Haq et al., 1987) has some validity. Our own observations on numerous sedimentary sequences around the world suggest that local and global eustatic events exist, and that relative sea-level curves can be constructed, but it should be remembered that the timing and magnitude of many global eustatic events are still to be established. As most workers in the field will be aware, much of the evidence to support the Haq et al. curve has not been published. The Sequence Stratigraphy of European Basins Project will go some way to rectify this, but it should be borne in mind that there can be an unfortunate tendency to use the Haq et al. curve for dating in its own right - i.e. fitting relative sea-level changes seen in a succession to the curve. If this is done, then the global . . .
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: The new taxon Trochamijiella gollesstanehi is described; it is morphologically similar to, but phylogenetically distinct from, Amijiella, and is initially trochospiral; it is known from Iran, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, and is believed to characterise the Late Bathonian. Primary type specimens of Amijiella amiji and Haurania deserta are refigured for comparison and are believed to characterise Early Bathonian and older Jurassic strata. All three genera are reclassified and all are placed in the Biokovinidae Gušić, 1977.
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 1991-12-01
    Description: The genus Valvobifarina is exhaustively revised to include three species; V. mackinnonii (Millett), the type species, V. robusta (Sidebottom), and V. niobeae sp.nov. All species are typified. Bifarina elongata Millett, 1900 is excluded from Valvobifarina.
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: Planktonic foraminifers from Pleistocene sediments from the Norwegian-Greenland Sea (NGS) have been subject to intense investigation during the past 20 years. This is mainly due to their almost continuous presence in glacial and interglacial times, and hence, their utility for establishing sound O18-isotopic curves. Traditionally, all are assigned to a polar and subpolar group. Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sinistral) is the only polar species, whereas the subpolar group is made up of Globigerina quinqueloba, G. bulloides, G. universa, N. pachyderma (dextral), N. dutertrei, Globigerinita glutinata, Gl. uvula, Globorotalia inflata, Glr. truncalutinoides, Glr. scitula. N. pachyderma (sinistral) is almost continuously present during glacial/interglacial times. This is in contrast to the subpolar species that show main abundances in interglacial maxima only. Prior to this study, a species belonging to the genus Beela has never been mentioned to occur in Pleistocene sediments north of 55° latitude (Holmes, 1984). My specimens exhibit a thin-walled spinose test; trochospiral becoming streptospiral; last chamber radially elongated but never pointed or digitate; aperture very variable from small umbilical to larger extraumbilical-umbilical. Its size ranges from 200–660μm, but is mainly confined to the 250–500μm mesh-size fraction.These general characteristics agree well with the emendation of the genus Beela by Holmes (1984). Accordingly, the described species will in future be assigned to Beela megastoma (Earland).There is good evidence that Beela megastoma is not simply a ‘warmer water form’ being swept into the NGS by North Atlantic Waters as some of those mentioned above, but a species that seems to. . .
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 1991-12-01
    Description: Two new Peridinioid dinoflagellate cyst species are described from Middle Jurassic strata of the Barents Sea Region. Phallocysta thomasi sp.nov. occurs in Aalenian-Bajocian sediments cored from the Nordkapp Basin and Valvaeodinium thereseae sp. nov. occurs in Upper Bathonian-Callovian deposits cropping out on Kong Karls Land and Franz Josef Land.
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: Kirkbyites upsoni Johnson, 1936 from the Upper Pennsylvanian of North America, type species of the poorly understood genus Kirkbyites, corresponds significantly with the well-known species Kullmannissites? solus Becker, 1981 from the Upper Devonian of SW Europe. From common, important diagnostic characters, the latter is considered to be a species of Kirkbyites Johnson, 1936 which is a valid genus of the Family Amphissitidae Knight, 1928 (Ostracoda, Palaeocopida, Kirkbyacea).
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: Analysis of distribution, diversity and abundance of nonpalaeocope ostracods from the type Wenlock Series demonstrates that a major faunal change occurs around the Sheinwoodian-Homerian Stage boundary and that significant increases in faunal diversity occur at that boundary and in the late Whitwell Chronozone. Low abundance and low diversity in the late Sheinwoodian is interpreted to represent maximum water depth for the type Wenlock Series whereas the high diversity fauna of the late Homerian represents shallowest water conditions for this sequence. Many late Homerian species range into the Lower Elton Formation (early Ludlow) which suggests gradual ecostratigraphic change across the Wenlock-Ludlow boundary. Ancestor-descendant relationships for several lineages in the type Wenlock Series define lineage zones which essentially coincide with assemblage zones based on nonpalaeocope ostracods.
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: A community of ten ostracod species characterizes the hypersaline channels of Khor Al-Mufateh and Khor Al-Mamlaha. The dominant species in Khor Al-Mufateh are Loxoconcha (Loxoconcha) indica Jain, 1978; Gibboborchella venosa Gumey, 1979; Gibboborchella alata Gurney, 1979; and Hemicytheridea paiki Jain, 1978. L.(L.) indica, along with Neomonoceratina sp., dominate Khor Al-Mamlaha. Other species ranging from common to rare, include Carinocythereis (Carinocythereis) batei Jain, 1978; Callistocythere cf. flavidofusca intricatoides (Ruggieri), 1953; Loxoconcha (Loxoconcha) multiornata Bate & Gurney, 1981; Tanella cf. gracilis Kingma, 1948; and Xestoleberis rotunda Hartmann, 1964.Khor Al-Mufateh and Al-Mamlaha are divided into zones according to the distribution of ostracod species, which are dependant upon the richness and distribution of algae and the type of sediment. The ten ostracod species are salinity-tolerant and occur in the upper third of Khor Al-Mufateh and the lower half of Khor Al-Mamlaha with salinity ranging between 55–70‰ and 45–70‰, respectively. These zones are rich in algal growth with sediments varying from muddy carbonate sands to sandy mud. Most ostracod species are found in abundance during the summer exhibiting a rich diversity of algae genera and species.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 1993-12-01
    Description: A new genus, Piallina Rettori & Zaninetti (type-species Piallina tethydis Rettori & Zaninetti sp.nov.), is recorded from the Upper Triassic (Carnian) of the Kocaeli Peninsula (Turkey). The new Family, the Piallinidae is also introduced.
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: Trace-element analysis of ostracod shells has been shown to be a powerful tool in Quaternary palaeoenvironmental reseach (e.g. Chivas et al., 1986). Particular use has been made of Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca ratios in ostracod shells as palaeosalinity and palaeotemperature indictors. However, work on trace elements such as Cd, Zn, Cu and Ba in benthic foraminifera (e.g, Boyle, 1981) has shown that chemical cleaning of the shell is necessary to remove surface-bound contaminants, so that only the lattice-bound elements are analyzed. This note describes the application of selected cleaning methods to non-marine ostracod shells and evaluates their effect on shell chemistry with particular reference to Sr, Mg, Mn and Fe.Samples of ostracod shells were taken from late Quaternary lacustrine marls from Wallywash Great Pond, Jamaica. Adult valves of the genus Cypretta Vàrva 1895 were selected at random and subjected to one of three cleaning methods as follows.Method A: shells cleaned thoroughly with a clean nylon paint brush (0000) and deionised water, until all visible particles (under x40 magnification) had been removed. Shells cleaned by methods B and C were also initially treated in this way.Method B: shells cleaned in a basic hydroxylamine hydrochloride solution at 80°C for 30 minutes and then rinsed in deionised water (Boyle, 1981).Method C: shells cleaned in a basic sodium dithionite complexing reagent at 80°C for 30 minutes and then rinsed with deionised water (Boyle, 1981).Nine individual valves were cleaned using each method. Once cleaned, the valves were individually dissolved in 3ml. . .
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: Lower Triassic conodonts are reported from limestones, interpreted as a possible submarine slump, exposed along the new Kuala Lipis -Gua Musang highway, northwest Pahang, Peninsular Malaysia. The co-occurrence of Neospathodus triangularis (Bender), Platyvillosus costatus (Staesch), Neospathodus dieneri Sweet and Platyvillosus hamadai Koike in the fauna indicates a Scythian (late Smithian) age. Platyvillosus hamadai is unknown from the Peri-Gondwana province and its occurrence in the fauna supports a pre-Early Triassic rifting of the Malay Peninsula from Gondwana.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 1991-12-01
    Description: The type specimens of Arcacythere chapmani Hornibrook, 1952 (the type species of Arcacythere Hornibrook, 1953; Tertiary, New Zealand) have been re-examined and are shown to have internal carapace features identical to those of Rockallia Whatley, Frame & Whittaker, 1978. Rockallia is known from Cenozoic deep-sea sediments worldwide and from the Oligocene and Miocene of northwestern Europe. The external carapace morphologies of Arcacythere and Rockallia show only minor distribution of the fossae. Rockallia is, therefore, shown to be a subjective junior synonym of Arcacythere. An emended diagnosis of A. chapmani is given.
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: There is no suitable mounting medium for the long term storage of Recent ‘live’ foraminifera. Glycerol has been used for this purpose since the last century, but its properties do not meet our requirements (see below). We therefore began a series of trials in order to find the ‘perfect’ mountant. The inception of this “Micropalaeontological Notebook” provides a timely opportunity to highlight the results of our experiments and to elicit a response from the readership to facilitate our search.In choosing mounting media for experiment it was first necessary to detail our requirements. The latter are as follows: the medium must be clear and possess a refractive index (nD) close or equal to that of glass. The nD of the mounted specimens should differ from that of the mountant or they will be invisible. It should function as a permanent mount, fixing specimens in a position suitable for light microscopical examination. It should not form aggregations or induce overlap of specimens and should permit easy relocation of small organisms (i.e., fixing them so that their co-ordinates can be read with an England Finder). It should neither be messy nor aspirate air and should not contract, thereby crushing delicate specimens. The mountant must be treated to inhibit bacterial and fungal growths. It must be relatively inexpensive and quick to prepare and must not solidify too rapidly, leaving insufficient time to position specimens. Since the specimens are ‘live’ it is important that the protoplasmic contents of the cell auld the mountant are. . .
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: A meager collection of conodonts recovered from the Dounans Limestone near Aberfoyle, Perthshire, consists for the most part of species with North American affinities. This fauna reaffirms correlation of the Dounans with part of Zone J (Cassinian) of the biostratigraphic succession in western United States. The conodonts indicate that the Dounans is equivalent to part of the zone of Didymograptus nitidus (middle Arenig) in the graptolite sequence for the Ordovician.
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: Recent bottom sediments from Tarut Bay were studied for their foraminiferal content. 13 of the 43 taxa comprise more than 90 percent of the total living and dead foraminifers. The bay sediments are characterized by a Miliolina-dominated assemblage, Rotaliina constitutes the next abundant suborder, with the Textulariina as a minor part of the fauna. Both living and dead populations exhibit low diversity (S=l–5) due to adverse hydrographic conditions in Tarut Bay.The foraminiferal species show significant variations between environments. The intertidal zone is dominated by Ammonia beccarii, Quinqueloculina spp., Elphidium, sp. aff. E. advena, Spirolina arietina and Peneroplis planatus. In the shallow subtidal zone (3m) is the abundance of Eggerelloides scabra, which constitutes 18.5% of the total foraminifers. Quinqueloculina spp., is the only dominant intertidal taxa to be present as a dominant member of the deeper subtidal zone. Differences in hydrographic conditions and other ecological parameters are considered to be responsible for the species variation. The Quinqueloculina-abundant foraminiferal assemblage of Tarut Bay differs considerably from the foraminiferal assemblages of the southwest Gulf.
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: 23 species of ostracods and 20 species and species groups of planktonic foraminifera from the 80m thick Qeren Sartabasection, central Jordan Valley, are described and illustrated. The material is determined by planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphy to belong to the latest Early Eocene (upper part of Zone P9) and the early Middle Eocene (Zone P10). The palaeoecology is representative of a pelagic marine shelf, with periodic events of shallowing and hardground formation.
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: The mainly Paleogene ostracod genus Soudanella Apostolescu (1961) is revised and quantitative aspects of its variability analysed by multivariate and geometric statistical methods. The role of ornamental polymorphism in the genus is considered, but dismissed on the weight of evidence, albeit indirect, for true specific identity of each of the three forms. The palaeo-biogeographical importance of Soudanella is reviewed.
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: Radiolaria can be preserved in all types of marine sedimentary rocks, the method for their extraction being dependent on the mineralogy of the radiolarian test and the nature of the rock-type in which they occur. In the past radiolaria could only be viewed in thin section (Hinde, 1890; Hinde & Fox, 1895), with no method of detecting the presence of radiolaria prior to sectioning. Modern extraction techniques are normally laboratory based and use hazardous chemicals, therefore it is advantageous to establish the radiolarian content of the sample before collection and transportation back to the laboratory. This can be achieved in a number of ways:-1. Non-lithified sediments. Radiolaria are separated from the sediment by washing the sample over a set of small sieves. Two mesh sizes should be used, a coarse mesh around 150μm to separate large litho-fragments, and a fine mesh no greater than 63μm to concentrate the radiolaria. The fine fraction is then washed with dilute hydrochloric acid (HCl) to eliminate the calcareous microfossils, leaving a pure radiolarian sludge, which is dried on filter paper.2. Siliceous rock-types. Methods for extracting radiolaria from cherts have been in use since the early 1970’s (Dumitrica, 1970; Pessagno & Newport, 1972), and have recently been applied to field-work (Cordey & Krauss, 1990). The recognition of fossiliferous bedded cherts is possible with the use of a hand-lens in good sunlight. If radiolaria are present, they should be detectable as small protrusions, especially along laminae. To extract the radiolaria, break up the sample. . .
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: Relative abundance variations of planktonic Foraminifera have been studied for the Late Miocene to Early Pliocene time interval of 7.0 to 3.5 Ma from three sites in the North East Atlantic; DSDP607 (41°N), DSDP609 (50°N) and DSDP611 (53°N), Particular attention has been given to the percentage of benthic Foraminifera of total (benthic + planktonic) Foraminifera as an index of dissolution by aggressive bottom waters, and to the percentage of dextral Neogloboquadrina pachyderma of total (dextral + sinistral) N. pachyderma as an index of “Sub-Polar” or warmer waters.Strong dissolution, probably associated with the northward penetration of aggressive Antarctic Bottom Water, is observed at two of the sites up to and during the initiation of the Messinian “Salinity Crisis” in the adjoining Mediterranean Sea at about 5.8 Ma. All three sites exhibit strong cyclic fluctuations of the percentage of dextral N. pachyderma during the Messinian “Salinity Crisis” interval, from approximately 5.8 Ma to 4.8 Ma. These are interpreted as indicating wide-ranging oscillations of a water mass boundary, analogous to the present-day Polar Front, in the North Atlantic during the “Salinity Crisis”. Following the re-filling of the Mediterranean with normal marine waters at about 4.8 Ma, the dextral form of N. pachyderma, which is more characteristic of warmer waters than the sinistral form, becomes the dominant form and shows less quantitative variation at all three sites throughout the Early Pliocene.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: There is no suitable mounting medium for the longterm storage of Recent, ‘live’ foraminifera. Glycerol has been used for this purpose since the last century, but its properties do not meet our requirements (see below). We therefore began a series of trials in order to find the ‘perfect’ mountant. The inception of this ‘Micropalaeontological Notebook’ provides a timely opportunity to highlight the results of our experiments and to elicit a response from the readership to facilitate our search.In choosing mounting media for experiment it was first necessary to detail our requirements. The latter are as follows: the medium must be clear and possess a refractive index (nD:) close or equal to that of glass. The nD of the mounted specimens should differ from that of the mountant or they will be invisible. It should function as a permanent mount, fixing specimens in a position suitable for light microscopical examination. It should not form aggregations or induce overlap of specimens and should permit easy relocation of small organisms (i.e., fixing them so that their co-ordinates can be read with an England Finder) It should neither be messy nor aspirate air and should not contract, thereby crushing delicate specimens. The mountant must be treated to inhibit bacterial and fungal growths. It must be relatively inexpensive and quick to prepare and must not solidify too rapidly, leaving insufficient time to position specimens. Since the specimens are ‘live’ it is important that the protoplasmic contents of the cell and the mountant are isotonic. Similarly, . . .
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: Oolina heteromorpha Parr, 1950, the type species of the genus Heteromorphina R.W. Jones, 1984 is demonstrated to be a junior synonym of Lagena collaris Cushman, 1913. In addition, two of the three species transferred by Jones to this genus are shown to belong to other genera. From the Miocene of DSDP Site 357 (Leg 39), located on the Rio Grande Rise, a new species, Heteromorphina amplivestibulata, is described and illustrated. It is characterized by an extremely large chamberlet in comparison to the principal chamber, which has a slightly produced caudal structure with a hollow central canal.
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: Van Veen (1936b) found the ostracod species Krausella minuta Triebel, in deposits of the uppermost Maastrichtian from the Valley of the Jeker, South Limburg, The Netherlands. Investigation has shown that Triebel never published any data on this species, so the name Krausella minuta has to be rejected, being a nomen nudum.In the boreholes of Kallo (27 E 148) and Knokke (11 E 138), in the northwestern part of Belgium, a related, yet undescribed species occurs, for which the name Cardobairdia triebeli sp. nov. is proposed. This taxon was found in deposits of mainly Lower Campanian age. Another new species, Cardobairdia rectimarginata, is described from the Campanian in the Knokke Borehole.The specimens of Cardobairdia minuta from the Cenomanian from southern England belong to a new species, defined here as C. cenomanensis.
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: ‘Sclerites’, described from the surfaces of conodont elements in bedding-plane assemblages by Rhodes and Austin (1985), are shown to be indentations of bladed minerals on the conodont element apatite. Such minerals are seen coating moulds from which conodont elements have been removed, and are identified tentatively as Kaolinite. The recognition of inorganically-produced surface patterns on conodont elements, developed within low thermal régimes, is considered relevant in the light of recent studies of biogenic and metamorphic surface features.
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: There has been a progression in palaeobiological classifications from the more primitive empirical “stamp collecting” stage where similar shapes were grouped together, to the more sophisticated phylogenetic classifications where supposed genetically related foraminiferal taxa are categorised together. But how do we know that certain extinct taxa were genetically related? This is a major problem where a number of factors interplay together: a belief in evolution, the experience of the operator and consequent recognition of phyletic lineages. In the study of Cenozoic planktonic foraminifera we are fortunate to have recognised a number of now well established lineages; also we have some data on amino-acids found in the tests of living species (King and Hare, 1972) which range back well into the Neogene. These latter data not only provide us with essential genetic information but they also give us confidence when dealing with the classification of extinct species.So how do we build this evolutionary knowledge into a classification? Clearly, genetically related species can be grouped together into subgenera, and related subgenera into broader genera. In their classification Loeblich and Tappan (1988) held a different view and decided not to use subgenera because (1) their usage produces an unwieldy classification, and (2) lineage concepts change when additional data are collected. If we follow their classification, then when you read about Globorotalia menardii, Globorotalia fohsi and Globorotalia hirsuta you could assume that they are closely related; this is not true. The three species have similar test morphologies but these have resulted from iterative. . .
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: One new chitinozoan genus, Salopochitina, and three new chitinozoan species Salopochitina bella, Eisenackitina varireticulata and Eisenackitina spongiosa, all of early Wenlock age, are described from two British Geological Survey boreholes at Lower Hill Farm, Shropshire, and Eastnor Park, Hereford and Worcester. The new taxa have short stratigraphical ranges, are relatively abundant, and may be useful for correlation in successions from Wales and the Welsh Borderlands.
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: Data is presented here on Reticulofenestra coccolith size distribution patterns from 122 Mid-Miocene to Pliocene samples from Deep Sea Drilling Project sites in the Western Indian Ocean and Red Sea. A clear pattern is revealed with a dramatic size reduction event occurring in the Late Miocene (nannofossil zone NN10). As a result of this event nannofloras from the interval above it are readily distinguishable by the absence of specimens longer than 5 microns; this interval is termed the “small Reticulofenestra interval”. Assemblages from above and below this interval contain large specimens but they can be reliably distinguished by different size distribution patterns within them. Analogous data from other studies is reviewed, possible causes of the pattern are discussed, and its biostratigraphic application described. The Neogene taxonomy of the genus Reticulofenestra is revised and four new combinations are proposed.
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 1991-12-01
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 1994-09-01
    Description: The trochoid coiling mode is the most dominant amongst hyaline foraminifera. The parallels in shape with especially gastropods neatly explains the use of the same terms to describe the spiral coiling. Other terms came in use, at first well-defined, but gradually losing their precision. Because of growing demands of systematics and changes in stress of use and value of characters, the inadequacy of this terminology has become a stumbling block. The terms ventral/dorsal and spiral/umbilical denote different things and are therefore all useful: the latter pair should not be relinquished as suggested (Haynes, 1990: 512). Historically, the terms ventral/dorsal and upper and lower side have been used by most students of the foraminifera with only few exceptions (notably Reuss and Loeblich & Tappan). Despite the protist nature of foraminifera, dorsal and ventral continued to be used, analogous to terms used to describe, for example gastropods. Far fewer problems beset the terms spiral and umbilical, which arc generally defined (Oxford English Dictionary) as: spiral a.. n. & v. 1. a. Coiled; winding about a centre in an enlarging or decreasing circular motion, either on a flat plane or rising in a cone. spire n. Spiral, coil; single twist of this; upper part of spiral shell [F. f. Lf. Gk speira coil] umbilical a. 1. Of, situated near, affecting, the umbilicus 2. Centrally placed. umbilicus n. Navel; (Bot. & Zool.) navel-like formation; (Geom.) point in a surface through which all cross-sections have same curvature [I., rel. to Gk omphalos]ORIENTATION: A GEOMETRICAL . . .
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 1994-09-01
    Description: The Chagos Archipelago is a series of atolls situated in the centre of the Indian Ocean close to the equator. The area experiences small tides and periods of strong winds. The combined effects of these is to cause relatively high energy conditions to exist in the shallow waters around the reefs, therefore the bottom sediments are coarse grained and mobile. Although the coral faunas are diverse, seagrasses are rare. The total benthic foraminiferal assemblages have low to high species diversity and are dominated by hyaline taxa. On the oceanic side of the atoll reefs, the dominant foraminiferan is Amphistegina lessonii, with subsidiary miliolids. Planklonic tests form up to 20% of the combined benthic and planktonic component. In the lagoon, the assemblages are dominated by Calcarina calcar, with subsidiary miliolids. Planktonic tests are relatively uncommon. Some post-mortem transport and damage to tests has taken place but the distribution patterns are believed to be representative of the original living ones.
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: Chapman’s (1910) Pseudocythere funafutiensis from 1924m off Funafuti, western Pacific is redescribed and illustrated together with additional Pleistocene and Recent material from the Coral and Tasman seas. A new paradoxostomatid genus, Glyphidocythere, is described to accommodate it and two other species yet to be formally described from the Banda Sea, eastern Indonesia. The genus is apparently restricted to the marine slope environment of low (less than 20°) southern latitudes. In the Coral and Tasman seas G. funafutiensis occurs within a narrow bathyal depth range (955m to 1754m) coincident with the Antarctic Intermediate Water.
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 1993-12-01
    Description: This study constitutes a revision and reappraisal of the samples used in the two classic studies of the calcareous benthic foraminifera of the Navet, San Fernando and Cipero Formations of Trinidad: Cushman & Renz’s 1948 study of the Eocene, and Cushman & Stainforth’s 1945 study of the Oligocene. Biostratigraphical calibration is achieved by reference to the lithological schemes of Bolli (1957) and other studies, and by directly assigning the samples to the standard planktonic foraminiferal and nannofossils zonal schemes. This direct calibration enables a more precise biostratigraphic framework for the type localities of 55 benthic foraminiferal taxa described by Cushman & Renz and Cushman & Stainforth.
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: This paper reports what we believe to be the first record of allogromiid foraminifers from coastal Indian waters. Two species from the Vellar Estuary on the east coast of India south of Madras are described and placed in a new genus Vellaria. The foraminifers live at or near the sediment-water interface and are characterised by the development of a flared, conical or trumpet-shaped apertural structure which apparently serves to attach the test to small sand grains. Allogromiids are delicate and inconspicuous organisms which may be more widespread in esturine and brackish water settings than is currently realised.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: Three new species of nummulites; Nummulites minutus sp. nov., N. omanensis sp. nov. and N. schaubi sp. nov., are described and illustrated from the Eocene of Northern Oman. N. omanensis sp. nov. and N. schaubi sp. nov. are shown to range from Early to Middle Lutetian whilst N. minutus sp. nov. ranges from Late Ypresian to Early Lutetian. N. minutus sp. nov. is far smaller in all major dimensions than any species of Nummulites previously described and if found in isolation would be assumed to be very primitive and probably dated as Late Palaeocene. However, N. minutus sp. nov. was found in association with an unreworked Lutetian fauna. The commonly held belief that proloculus size and test size are smallest in the most primitive (i.e. oldest) species must therefore be treated with some degree of caution.
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: Small rosette borings, consisting of an excavated pit from which is subtended a system of branching galleries, are common in carbonate skeletal substrates in the Upper Jurassic Oxford Clay (Callovian-Oxfordian) and Kimmeridge Clay (Kimmeridgian) of southern England and northern France. The opening of the pit onto the substrate surface is surrounded by an agglutinated collar, which suggests that they may be the work of Foraminifera. The new genus and species, Globodendrina monile, are erected to accommodate them. Other examples of boring in the Foraminiferida are reviewed. It is proposed that other similar rosette boring ichnogenera may also be the work of foraminiferans.
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: During scanning electron microscope investigations of living coccolithophorids from the Mediterranean Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean, two hitherto undescribed species of the genus Syracosphaera Lohmann, 1902 emend. Gaarder (in Gaarder and Heimdal, 1977) were found. The first species, Syracosphaera noroiticus sp. nov., was recorded in the Gulf of Lyons (Mediterranean Sea), and the second, S. marginaporata sp. nov., was found in the eastern North Atlantic.
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: Type material of calcareous nannofossil index species Coccolithus crassus and two geographically widespread species Toweius magnicrassus and T. callosus have been studied by both light and SEM microscopy and morphometric measurements were made. Coccolithus crassus resembles Coccolithus pelagicus but has a raised cycle of elements around the centre of the distal shield. It probably evolved from C. pelagicus. Both T. magnicrassus and T. callosus have three cycles of elements in distal view, which is a characteristic of Toweius. Toweius magnicrassus is larger than T. callosus. Differentiation of T. magnicrassus from T. callosus is possible and useful because there is generally a size gap between them in a given sample and they have different stratigraphic ranges. However, both T. callosus and T. magnicrassus appear to increase in size from high to low latitudes. Toweius callosus most probably evolved from Toweius pertusus in the latest Palaeocene and gave rise to T. magnicrassus in the early Eocene.
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 1993-08-01
    Description: An influx of Ammobaculites cf. obliquus Loeblich & Tappan is documented from the late Jurassic-early Cretaceous Purbeck Formation of Dorset, south-west England. The foraminifera are interpreted as inhabitants of a dysaerobic, muddy, brackish lagoonal environment.
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 1992-12-01
    Description: There are various opinions as to what parameter influences the coiling directions in foraminifera. “Do microspheric and megalospheric generations have different coiling ratios?” is an unanswered question in foraminiferal studies. Per view of this, an attempt is made to study the relationship between mode of reproduction (sexual/asexual) and coiling direction (dextral/sinistral) in the benthic foraminiferal species Rotalidium annectens (Parker & Jones). Proloculus (initial chamber) size is taken as an indicator of changes in reproductive behaviour.The present study is based on the observations made on 17722 specimens of this species from 186 samples, obtained from 3 sediment cores (representing a time span of about 9,500 years) from the shallow water region off Karwar, west coast of India. The results indicate an inverse relationship between mean proloculus size and dextrality (% of dextral forms) which is statistically confirmed. The correlation value (r = −0.57) between the two parameters is above the level of significance at 99% level. Therefore, it is inferred that microspheric generation (smaller proloculus) prefers dextral coiling and coiling in benthic foraminifera appears to be influenced by mode of reproduction.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: The study of opened specimens of Millettia species confirms the presence of septula subdividing the individual chambers. Toothplates are present between the individual septular foramina, and the chamber foramen. Polished and etched sections show the test to be bilamellar, but secondary lamination is absent. The toothplates are monolamellar and made up of inner lining, each one continuous with the septula which are formed by doubled-up inner lining. Laterally, the internal chamber walls are covered by a web-like coating of supplementary inner lining, continuous with the septula. X-ray diffraction shows the genus to be calcific. The genus is revised to include M. tessellata, M. limbata and the newly described M. ipsithillae and M. polyxenae. The monotypic Millettiidae are considered incertae sedis within the Rotaliina.
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: Two new genera and eight new species of benthic foraminifera are described from the shallow water, tropical lagoon of Madang, Papua New Guinea. The new hauerinid genus Pseudolachlanella is characterized by juvenile cryptoquinqueloculine, adult almost massiline arranged chambers, and a slitlike, curved aperture with parallel sides and a long, slender, curved miliolid tooth. Pitella haigi n. gen., n. sp. is a new foraminifera with cryptoquinqueloculine arranged chambers, an almost entirely pitted shell surface (pseudopores) and a rounded aperture with a short simple tooth. Among the other species described as new are four hauerinids and two agglutinated foraminifera All new species described here occur sporadically in the shallow water back- and forereef environments of the lagoon (0–55m), and live infaunally and epifaunally in well-oxygenated, fine and coarse grained biogenic sediments. They are absent in muddy, organic-rich, low-oxygen sedimentary environments within bay inlets where variations of salinity are considerable.
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: Planktonic and benthic foraminifera from the type area of the early Oligocene Eptahorion Formation (Mesohellenic Basin, northern Greece) have been ranged and partly described and figured. Altogether, about 130 taxa were identified. According to the current age assignments, the formation is attributable to Blow’s Zones P20 and P21. The record of benthic palaeoecologic indices has thrown light on bathymetric history of the formation. The deposition of the whole sequence, after the initial transgressive phase, occured in a marine, relatively deep environment. Palaeontologic evidence indicates few changes, ranging from the epibathyal to the outer neritic bathymetric domain.
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 1992-06-01
    Description: Palynological and lithological results have been employed in interpreting the depositional environment of strata penetrated by the Igbomotoru-1 well at the interval 1123–3583 metres. The environment of deposition is largely transitional with marine influence occurring only at the base of the studied sequence. Zonocostites ramonae is frequent to abundant in most samples: this indicates a high influence of mangrove swamp vegetation in the environment at the time of deposition. The absence or rarity of this species at some horizons within the studied interval is taken as evidence of deposition in a more continental environment or of a swamp forest area composed of non-Rhizophora type trees. The nature of the organic matter points to a source area near the basin of deposition for the sediments.
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 1991-12-01
    Description: It has been shown that during Jurassic and Cretaceous kenoxic events, while other groups of benthonic Ostracoda severely decline and eventually disappear, the Platycopina tend to survive. The survival of the platycopids is attributed to their being filter feeders who, in dysaerobic conditions manage to obtain sufficient oxygen by virtue of the greater volume of water which they circulate across their respiratory surface in the course of their normal feeding behaviour. The podocopid ostracods, which are predators, scavengers and deposit feeders, are unable to survive the diminished oxygen concentrations which characterise these events. The platycopid genus Cytherella is shown to dominate the oxygen mininmum zone in two different parts of the Atlantic at the present day.
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: A study of heavy metals in estuarine sediments and foraminiferal tests along with foraminiferal distributions from Southampton Water indicates that:a) heavy metals have a marked effect upon foraminiferid distribution. Some species are able to tolerate pollution and their relative abundance increases at discharge points, whereas other species develop test deformities. Investigation of cores show that no deformed specimens exist within sediments prior to the introduction of pollution.b) deformed specimens contain higher levels of elements such as Cu and Zn than non-deformed specimens. This indicates that heavy metals may be responsible for the abnormalities within foraminiferid tests. Culture experiments support this hypothesis. Specimens of Ammonia beccarii (Linné) developed abnormal chambers over a period of 12 weeks within a culture medium containing 10–20ppb of Cu.
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 1991-08-01
    Description: Core samples from the Paleogene of the Bonavista C-99 well on the northeast Newfoundland shelf and cuttings from downdip Blue H-28 contain foraminiferal assemblages which enable reconstruction of paleoenvironments along a downslope transect in Eocene through Late Oligocene-Miocene time. Comparison with coeval assemblages in North Sea wells with respect to structure and grain size of agglutinated taxa between the two areas reveal inter-basin differences.Reconstruction of the paleobathymetry derived from foraminiferal analysis, confirms seismic evidence for shallowing at the Bonavista site beginning in the Early Oligocene. The relationship of the Bonavista assemblages to contour currents is explored with reference to modern regional analogues. Species such as Reticulophragmium amplectens, Haplophragmoides walteri, Eponides umbonatus and Uvigerina ex. gr. miozea-nuttalli persist stratigraphically higher in the deeper Blue site.The paleoslope of this two-well transect is determined as approximately 0.48° during the Middle to Late Eocene and 0.68° during the Late Oligocene-Early Miocene. The bottom water hydrography of the transect can be evaluated by reference to these assemblages and a comparison to flysch-type agglutinated assemblages from a transect in the North Sea. The presence of an Upper Eocene-Middle Miocene hiatus at the Blue site contrasting with apparently continuous Tertiary deposition at Bonavista places a theoretical upper limit of 500–1000 m on the depth of the early Cenozoic western boundary undercurrent.
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: The morphological variation of two benthic foraminiferal species, Gyroidinoides altiformis (Stewart & Stewart) and Gyroidinoides subangulatus (Plummer), are described from Late Neogene - Quaternary, and Palaeogene sequences from northern Italy and Greece. A number of morphotypes, two for each species, are thought to be ecophenotypes. The inferred ecological (bathymetric) conditioning derives from: 1) comparable shape variations occur in species of very different ages; 2) both species exhibit the same morphological changes as a result of a comparable environmental trend.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: Permocalculus iagifuensis, a new species of gymnocodiacean alga is described from the Miocene of the Darai Limestone Formation of Papua New Guinea. The discovery of this species greatly extends the range of gymnocodiacean algae, which previously had only been confidently recorded from the Permian and Cretaceous. It also suggests an evolutionary link to the Recent genus Galaxaura (order Nemalionales; family Chaetangiaceae), which is the only extant alga bearing a similarity to the Gymnocodiaceae. Alternatively, a closer relationship to the green udoteacean algae (e.g. Halimeda) is considered. The microfauna and other microflora associated with this new species are briefly described.
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: Benthic Foraminifera from middle to late Pleistocene, (c. 600ka to 0ka), sediments of ODP Hole 686B, off Peru, show highest abundances and diversities during periods of cooler surface waters, (inferred from the Uk37 index), and enhanced upwelling, (inferred from the peridinacean/gonyaulacacean dinoflagellate cyst ratio). During the latest Pleistocene, (c. 160ka to 0ka), these periods are characterised by higher organic carbon contents in the bottom sediments, and occur during the odd-numbered, interglacial_18O stages. The benthic Foraminifera indicate deposition in 120 to 250 metres water depth for the earlier part of the record, (c. 600ka to c. 200ka), within the oxygen-minimum zone, with bottom water oxygen contents of
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 1991-03-01
    Description: Six cored boreholes in Guangxi Province, southern China yielded a fauna of Cypridacea as well as diverse Limnocytheridae which will be the subject of a separate publication. This paper deals only with the Cypridacea. Four species of Candona were present of which three are new, one previously described species of Candoniella (a controversial genus which is probably a synonym of Candona) and one new species of Pontoniella.
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: The age of the fossil flora found in the Kiltorcan Formation of Co. Kilkenny has been disputed for many years, with no datable miospore assemblage ever being extracted from the plant beds due to the preservation. New exposure on Kiltorcan Hill, and experimentation with palynological techniques has allowed the extraction of two miospore assemblages. The palynological data studied shows that the strata on Kiltorcan Hill straddles the Devonian/Carboniferous Boundary; A Devonian LE Miospore Biozone assemblage has been examined from a plant bed with Cyclostigma kiltorkense whilst a Carboniferous VI Miospore Biozone date was determined for a plant bed with Lepidodendropsis sp., and? Rhacophyton. The topmost occurrence of Cyclostigma kiltorkense is unknown but it is certainly very near to the Devonian/ Carboniferous Boundary. The use of Cyclostigma kiltorkense as an index fossil for the uppermost Devonian is therefore not precluded.
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: about 200 right valves of Cytherella cf. ovata Roemer, were selected from a single sample of Cenomanian age (northeastern Algeria). The material can be subdivided into two parallel ontogenetic series which were quantitatively investigated by linear regression and eigenshape analysis. The corresponding growth stages of the two series are differentiated by size, growth rate, and, to a lesser extent, by shape. The relationship between the two series are discussed mainly in terms of seasonal variation in the environment.
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: Radiolarians and diatoms are documented for the first time from the mid-Cretaceous succession of the Sergipe Basin, a passive marginal basin in northeastern Brazil. Prevailing palaeoceanographic conditions are inferred for the episodes of siliceous radiolarian and diatom biomineralization/preservation. Radiolarian faunas are first recorded in the middle to upper Albian, from scattered occurrences, and subsequently throughout most of the Cenomanian-Turonian succession. Spumellarian forms are dominant in all the sections. Nassellarian forms seem to have thrived in relatively deep-water environments, in middle neritic to upper bathyal pelagic biotopes, and have been recovered from upper Albian and uppermost Cenomanian to middle Turonian sediments. Diatom frustules are only recorded from upper Cenomanian and lower Turonian deposits. These seem to have been more abundant in shallower neritic environments. The onset of the radiolarian assemblages in middle-late Albian times (with waning low-oxygen pelagic conditions) is thought to be a response to better developed oceanic circulation patterns and to a water mass saturated in dissolved silica, perhaps generated by deep-sea volcanic processes in the formation of early oceanic crust and the mid-oceanic ridge in the northern South Atlantic. On the other hand, the record of radiolarian and diatom tests throughout the Cenomanian-Turonian succession is commonly associated with dysaerobic to quasi-anaerobic bottom conditions. This is not only in keeping with high epipelagic primary productivity in well-oxygenated surface waters and that the sea water apparently contained a high level of dissolved silica, but also suggests that the bottom and interstitial waters were enriched in carbon dioxide, had a low pH and slightly negative redox-potential (Eh). The overall conditions would have favoured the biomineralization and post-mortem preservation of siliceous organisms increasing, therefore, the radiolaria+diatom/foraminifera ratio in the sediments, which supports the conclusions of several previous authors.
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 1990-07-01
    Description: Lithocodium aggregatum Elliott (with its synonyms, Bacinella irregularis Radoiĉić and Pseudolithocodium carpaticum Miŝík), Radoicicinellopsis sterni (Radoiĉić) and Bacinellacodium calcareus Dragastan are referred to the new subfamily Lithocodioidea of the family Codiaceae (marine, chlorophycean, calcareous algae). The significance which has been ascribed to these taxa by past authors is assessed. Radoicicinellopsis is proposed as a new genus. Lithocodium is redescribed and its diagnosis is emended. The importance of this alga in palaeoenvironmental interpretation and fossil hydrocarbon accumulation is noted.
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 1994-09-01
    Description: The Journal of Micropalaeontology is now well-established as an international publication covering all aspects of microfossils and their applications both in applied studies and in basic research. This has been brought about through the unstinting efforts of the two previous editors, Lesley Sheppard (1982-87) and Mike Keen (1988-94), and their supporting Editorial Boards. Last autumn, the officers of the Society decided that with the appointment of a new editor, the journal should be published through the Geological Society Publishing House. Since becoming Editor in March, my first task has been to implement the arrangements with the Geological Society. The advantages to the BMS are several. First, there is now a clear separation of duties between the Editorial Board, who will handle all aspects of scientific content and quality control of manuscripts accepted for publication, and the Publishing House, who will be responsible for the entire process of publication and distribution. Second, we gain from professional advice over format and layout. Third, the competitive pricing includes advertising in Geological Society publication lists and reciprocal arrangements with other major geological societies throughout the world. The first obvious manifestation of these changes is in the newly designed cover which now includes a list of keywords, the ISSN number and a bar code to conform with modern publishing practice.Another major change of policy concerns the role of the Editorial Board. Previously, each Specialist Group nominated an editor who then handled manuscripts appropriate to his or her specialty. As the number of Groups has
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 1993-12-01
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