Navesink
Description
Source: Wikipédia
La Formation de Navesink est une formation géologique de marnes glauconitiques et de sables verts datant entre 70 et 66 millions d'années, situé dans le New Jersey, aux États-Unis.
Découvertes
Source: The Paleobiology Database
Site(s) correspondant(s) à cette formation: 10Inversand Company pit / Edelman Fossil Park, Sewell (Navesink) : New Jersey - Gloucester 1580 7438 35500 54671 73430
Inversand Company marl pit at Sewell, Mantua Township. Quarrying began in the 1920s and ceased in 2015, at which time the site became the Jean and Ric Edelman Fossil Park quarry (EFPQ) at Rowan University.- Hadrosauridae identifié comme Edmontosaurus minor
- Lambeosaurinae
Hungerford & Terry Corporation pit : New Jersey - Gloucester 773 9209 16706 23486 70677
in a pit of the Hungerford & Terry Corp., near SewellSwedesboro (Navesink) : New Jersey - Gloucester 773 9209 12319 16706 17109 17161 54671 60758
near Swedesboro- Hadrosauridae identifié comme Hadrosaurus cavatus n. sp.
Big Brook (Navesink) : New Jersey - Monmouth 1580 39861 40648 54671
near Boundary Rd. in MarlboroAtlantic Highlands : New Jersey - Monmouth 39861 54671
bluff E of Atlantic Highlands, "essentially the same locality" as Sandy HookG. C. Schenck Farm : New Jersey - Monmouth 14123 14442 54671 63583
G. C. Schenck farm, near Colt's Neck, Marlboro, Monmouth County, New JerseySchenck Farm : New Jersey - Monmouth 54671 73430
Milford Brook, Manalapan : New Jersey - Monmouth 54671
Poricy Brook, Middletown : New Jersey - Monmouth 39861 54671 85047
Poricy Brook, 2.5 mi. S of Middletown, on Middletown-Lincroft Rd.(Church St.)Holmdel Park Site : New Jersey - Monmouth 77306
Located along a small tributary tributary of Ramanessin Brook that flows along the northeastern border of Holmdel Park roughly paralleling Crawfords Corner Road. The fossil-bearing outcrops are found on both sides of the streambed for a distance of approximately 0.12 km (0.7 miles).
Publication(s)
La base comprend 21 publication(s).
Source: The Paleobiology Database
- ↑1 2 R. G. Chaffee. 1939. A New Jersey mosasaur of the subfamily Platecarpinae. The Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (37):1-5
- ↑1 2 W. B. Gallagher, D. C. Parris, and E. E. Spamer. 1986. Paleontology, biostratigraphy, and depositional environments of the Cretaceous-Tertiary transition in the New Jersey coastal plain. The Mosasaur 3:1-35
- ↑1 W. B. Gallagher. 2002. Faunal changes across the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary in the Atlantic coastal plain of New Jersey: restructuring the marine community after the K-T mass-extinction event. Catastrophic Events and Mass Extinctions: Impacts and beyond. GSA Special Paper 356:291-301 (https://doi.org/10.1130/0-8137-2356-6.291)
- ↑1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 W. B. Gallagher. 1993. The Cretaceous/Tertiary mass extinction event in the North Atlantic coastal plain. The Mosasaur 5:75-154
- ↑1 2 C. D. Brownstein. 2021. Osteology and phylogeny of small-bodied hadrosauromorphs from an end-Cretaceous marine assemblage. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 191(1):180-200 (https://doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa085/5892979)
- ↑1 2 3 E. H. Colbert. 1948. A hadrosaurian dinosaur from New Jersey. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 100:23-37
- ↑1 2 D. Baird. 1986. Upper Cretaceous reptiles from the Severn Formation of Maryland. The Mosasaur 3:63-85
- ↑1 2 A. Prieto-Márquez, D. B. Weishampel, and J. R. Horner. 2006. The dinosaur Hadrosaurus foulkii, from the Campanian of the East Coast of North America, with a reevaluation of the genus. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 51(1):77-98
- ↑1 J. R. Horner, D. B. Weishampel, and C. A. Forster. 2004. Hadrosauridae. The Dinosauria (2nd edition). University of California Press, Berkeley (https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520242098.003.0023)
- ↑1 J. Anné, B. P. Hedrick, and J. P. Schein. 2016. First diagnosis of septic arthritis in a dinosaur. Royal Society Open Science 3(8):160222:1-7 (https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160222)
- ↑1 2 E. D. Cope. 1871. Supplement to the "Synopsis of the Extinct Batrachia and Reptilia of North America". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 12:41-52 (https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.60499)
- ↑1 R. S. Lull and N. E. Wright. 1942. Hadrosaurian dinosaurs of North America. Geological Society of America Special Paper 40:1-242 (https://doi.org/10.1130/spe40-p1)
- ↑1 H. W. Miller, Jr. 1955. A check-list of the Cretaceous and Tertiary vertebrates of New Jersey. Journal of Paleontology 29(5):903-914
- ↑1 W. F. Rapp. 1944. Check list of the fossil reptiles of New Jersey. Journal of Paleontology 18(3):285-288
- ↑1 2 F. Bukowski. 1980. Cretaceous fossils from New Jersey and Delaware. Earth Science 33(2):55-60
- ↑1 2 3 4 5 W. B. Gallagher. 1984. Paleoecology of the Delaware Valley region. Part II: Cretaceous to Quartenary. The Mosasaur 2:9-43
- ↑1 2 J. Leidy. 1865. Cretaceous reptiles of the United States. Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge 192:1-135 (https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.39830)
- ↑1 O. P. Hay. 1908. The fossil turtles of North America. Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 75:1-568 (https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.21745)
- ↑1 C.-g. Yun. 2017. Teihivenator gen. nov., a new generic name for the tyrannosauroid dinosaur "Laelaps" macropus (Cope, 1868; preoccupied by Koch, 1836). Journal of Zoological and Bioscience Research 4(2):7-13 (https://doi.org/10.24896/jzbr.2017422)
- ↑1 D. B. Weishampel and L. Young. 1996. Dinosaurs of the East Coast (https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3931.1996.tb01654.x)
- ↑1 2 W. R. Callahan, C. M. Mehling, and R. K. Denton Jr, D. C. Parris. 2014. Vertebrate Paleontology and Stratigraphy of the Late Cretaceous Holmdel Park Site, Monmouth County, New Jersey. Dakoterra 6:163-169
Galerie d'image
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