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                             108 results found
no title author magazine year volume issue page(s) type
1 A benthic foraminiferal record of middle to late Pliocene (3.15-2.85 Ma) deep water change in the North Atlantic Ishman, Scott E.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 165-180
16 p.
article
2 Abnormal carbonate diagenesis in Holocene–late Pleistocene sapropel-associated sediments from the Eastern Mediterranean; evidence from Emiliania huxleyi coccolith morphology Crudeli, Daniela
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 217-240
24 p.
article
3 A conceptual model explaining benthic foraminiferal microhabitats Jorissen, Frans J.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 3-15
13 p.
article
4 A high-resolution marine palynological record from the central mainland coast of British Columbia, Canada: Evidence for a mid-late Holocene dry climate interval Galloway, Jennifer M.
2010
86-87 1-4 p. 62-78
17 p.
article
5 A hypothesis for the origin of fibrillar bodies in planktic foraminifera by bacterial endosymbiosis West, Oona L.O.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 131-135
5 p.
article
6 A marine and terrestrial Sirius Group succession, middle Beardmore Glacier-Queen Alexandra Range, Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica Webb, P.-N.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 273-297
25 p.
article
7 Aptian to Maastrichtian paleobathymetric reconstruction of the Eastern Venezuelan Basin Carrillo, M.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 405-418
14 p.
article
8 Aspects of the post-Cretaceous recovery of the Cenozoic planktic foraminifera Arnold, Anthony J.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 319-327
9 p.
article
9 Assemblages of coccolithophorids and other living microplankton off the coast of Puerto Rico during January–May 1995 Jordan, R.W.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 113-130
18 p.
article
10 Author Index Volume 39, 2000 2000
86-87 1-4 p. 315-316
2 p.
article
11 Author Index Volume 52 (2004) 2004
86-87 1-4 p. 299-300
2 p.
article
12 Benthic foraminifera from the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago (northern Brazil) Levy, Alain
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 89-97
9 p.
article
13 Biogeography of Neogene calcareous nannofossils in the Caribbean and the eastern equatorial Pacific—floral response to the emergence of the Isthmus of Panama Kameo, K.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 201-218
18 p.
article
14 Biometric analysis of Pliensbachian-Toarcian (Lower Jurassic) coccoliths of the family Biscutaceae: intra- and interspecific variability versus palaeoenvironmental influence Mattioli, Emanuela
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 5-27
23 p.
article
15 Biometry of early Oligocene Lepidocyclina from Kutch, India Saraswati, Pratul Kumar
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 303-311
9 p.
article
16 Biostratigraphic and paleoclimatic significance of a new Pliocene foraminiferal fauna from the central Arctic Ocean Müllen, Michael W.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 273-280
8 p.
article
17 Biostratigraphic implications of the Maastrichtian-lower Eocene sequence at the North Gunna section, Farafra Oasis, Western Desert, Egypt Abdel-Kireem, Mohamed Rashad
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 329-340
12 p.
article
18 Biotic signals from nannoflora across the iridium anomaly in the upper Eocene of the Massignano section: evidence from statistical analysis Monechi, S
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 219-237
19 p.
article
19 Calcareous nannofossil palaeoecology and palaeoceanographic reconstruction Villa, Giuliana
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 1-3
3 p.
article
20 Calcareous nannofossils and Mesozoic oceanic anoxic events Erba, Elisabetta
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 85-106
22 p.
article
21 Calibration of early–middle Toarcian nannofossil events based on high-resolution ammonite biostratigraphy in two expanded sections from the Iberian Range (East Spain) Perilli, N.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 293-308
16 p.
article
22 Campanian Bolivinoides and microfacies from the La Luna Formation, western Venezuela De Romero, Linda M.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 385-395
11 p.
article
23 Coccolithophore (–CaCO3) flux in the Sea of Okhotsk: seasonality, settling and alteration processes Broerse, A.T.C
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 179-200
22 p.
article
24 Coccolithophores in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean: response to seasonal and Late Quaternary surface water variability Kinkel, H.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 87-112
26 p.
article
25 Coccolithus pelagicus, a productivity proxy related to moderate fronts off Western Iberia Cachão, M
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 131-155
25 p.
article
26 Codonofusiella (Fusulinidae): Shell architecture and its functional meaning Leppig, Ursula
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 461-467
7 p.
article
27 Contents Volume 52 (2004) 2004
86-87 1-4 p. 301-302
2 p.
article
28 Contents volume 27, 1996 1996
86-87 1-4 p. 327-
1 p.
article
29 Content volume 1995
86-87 1-4 p. 479-480
2 p.
article
30 Cretaceous foraminifers from the Mandawa Basin, southern Tanzania: preliminary results Karega, Amina
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 419-423
5 p.
article
31 Cytological examination of symbiont loss in a benthic foraminifera, Amphistegina gibbosa Talge, Helen K.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 107-113
7 p.
article
32 Depositional and microfaunal response to Pliocene climate change and tectonics in the eastern Gulf of Alaska Lagoe, Martin B.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 121-140
20 p.
article
33 Depth estimation by proportions of living larger foraminifera Hohenegger, Johann
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 31-47
17 p.
article
34 Diatom constraints on the position of the Antarctic Polar Front in the middle part of the Pliocene Barron, John A.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 195-213
19 p.
article
35 Diatoms from the Pearl River estuary, China and their suitability as water salinity indicators for coastal environments Zong, Yongqiang
2010
86-87 1-4 p. 38-49
12 p.
article
36 Diatom symbionts in larger foraminifera from Caribbean hosts Lee, John J.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 99-105
7 p.
article
37 Differential patterns of benthic foraminiferal extinctions near the Paleocene/Eocene boundary in the North Atlantic and the western Tethys Ortiz, Nieves
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 341-359
19 p.
article
38 DNA analysis of “Ammonia beccarii” morphotypes: one or more species? Pawlowski, Jan
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 171-178
8 p.
article
39 Do benthic foraminifer records represent a productivity index in oxygen minimum zone areas? An evaluation from the Oman Margin, Arabian Sea Naidu, Pothuri Divakar
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 49-55
7 p.
article
40 Drastic change in the geographical distribution of the cold-water nannofossil Coccolithus pelagicus (Wallich) Schiller at 2.74 Ma in the late Pliocene, with special reference to glaciation in the Arctic Ocean Sato, Tokiyuki
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 181-193
13 p.
article
41 Editorial Board 2010
86-87 1-4 p. iii-
1 p.
article
42 Editorial Board 2004
86-87 1-4 p. IFC-
1 p.
article
43 Editorial Board 1995
86-87 1-4 p. iii-
1 p.
article
44 Editorial Board 1996
86-87 1-4 p. iii-
1 p.
article
45 Environmental control on the biogeography of modern coccolithophores in the southeastern Indian Ocean offshore of Western Australia Takahashi, K.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 73-86
14 p.
article
46 Eocene–Oligocene calcareous nannofossils from Maud Rise and Kerguelen Plateau (Antarctica): paleoecological and paleoceanographic implications Persico, Davide
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 153-179
27 p.
article
47 Equatorial Pacific sea surface temperatures, faunal patterns, and carbonate burial during the Pliocene King, Teresa
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 63-84
22 p.
article
48 Evidence for annual records of phytoplankton productivity in the Kimmeridge Clay Formation coccolith stone bands (Upper Jurassic, Dorset, UK) Lees, Jackie A.
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 29-49
21 p.
article
49 Evidence of Pliocene Nothofagus in Antarctica from Pliocene marine sedimentary deposits (DSDP Site 274) Fleming, R. Farley
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 227-236
10 p.
article
50 Fertility tracers and monsoon forcing at an equatorial site of the Somali Basin (Northwest Indian Ocean) Grazzini, C.Vergnaud
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 137-152
16 p.
article
51 First direct documentation of associations of Ceratolithus cristatus ceratoliths, hoop-coccoliths and Neosphaera coccolithomorpha planoliths Sprengel, C.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 39-41
3 p.
article
52 Foraminiferal assemblages from bottom sediments at Marian Cove, South Shetland Islands, West Antarctica Chang, Soon-Keun
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 223-232
10 p.
article
53 Foraminiferal sequence biostratigraphy and seismic stratigraphy of a tectonically active margin; the Yakataga Formation, northeastern Gulf of Alaska Zellers, Sarah D.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 255-271
17 p.
article
54 Foraminiferal zonation of late Paleozoic depositional sequences Ross, Charles A.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 469-478
10 p.
article
55 Further evidence for the heterococcolith–holococcolith combination Calcidiscus leptoporus–Crystallolithus rigidus Cortés, M.Y.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 35-37
3 p.
article
56 High-resolution palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of ODP Hole 963D (Sicily Channel) during the last deglaciation based on calcareous nannofossils Di Stefano, Enrico
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 241-254
14 p.
article
57 Impacts of storms on Recent planktic foraminiferal test production and CaCO3 flux in the North Atlantic at 47 °N, 20 °W (JGOFS) Schiebel, Ralf
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 115-129
15 p.
article
58 Introduction climates and climate variability of the Pliocene Poore, Richard Z.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 1-2
2 p.
article
59 Larger agglutinated foraminifera of McMurdo Sound, Antarctica: Are Astrammina rara and Notodendrodes antarctikos allogromiids incognito? Bowser, Samuel S.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 75-88
14 p.
article
60 Larger foraminiferal assemblages from Oligocene platform carbonates, Jamaica: Tethyan or Caribbean? Robinson, Edward
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 313-318
6 p.
article
61 Late Oligocene-Early Miocene foraminiferal biostratigraphy and paleoenvironments of the Maibong-Jagdi Area, North Cachar Hills of Assam, India Rao, Datti C.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 281-285
5 p.
article
62 Late Pleistocene–Holocene paleoclimate and related paleoenvironmental changes as recorded by calcareous nannofossils and planktonic foraminifera assemblages in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea (Cape Palinuro, Italy) Ornella Amore, Filomena
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 255-276
22 p.
article
63 Late Quaternary paleoceanography deduced from coccolith assemblages in a piston core recovered off the central Japan coast Aizawa, Chieko
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 277-297
21 p.
article
64 Latest Quaternary foraminifers and sediment transport in Pervenets Canyon, Bering Sea Starratt, Scott W.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 233-243
11 p.
article
65 Lower Cretaceous benthic foraminifera from DSDP Site 263: micropalaeontological constraints for the early evolution of the Indian Ocean Holbourn, Ann E.L.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 425-460
36 p.
article
66 Lower Cretaceous calcareous nannoplankton from the Neuquén Basin, Argentina Bown, P.R.
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 51-84
34 p.
article
67 Major deglaciation of east Antarctica during the early Late Pliocene? Not likely from a marine perspective Warnke, Detlef A.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 237-251
15 p.
article
68 Microhabitats of salt marsh foraminifera: St. Catherines Island, Georgia, USA Goldstein, Susan T.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 17-29
13 p.
article
69 Middle Pliocene sea surface temperatures: a global reconstruction Dowsett, Harry
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 13-25
13 p.
article
70 Middle Pliocene vegetation: reconstructions, paleoclimatic inferences, and boundary conditions for climate modeling Thompson, Robert S.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 27-49
23 p.
article
71 Mid-Pliocene warmth: stronger greenhouse and stronger conveyor Raymo, M.E.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 313-326
14 p.
article
72 Miocene and Pliocene paleoclimate of the Dry Valleys region, Southern Victoria land: a geomorphological approach Marchant, David R.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 253-271
19 p.
article
73 Modeling of middle Pliocene climate with the NCAR GENESIS general circulation model Sloan, L. Cirbus
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 51-61
11 p.
article
74 Multiple deep-water sources and trophic regimes in the latest Cretaceous deep sea: evidence from benthic foraminifera Widmark, Joen G.V.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 361-384
24 p.
article
75 Nannofossil assemblage fluctuations during the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum at Sites 213 (Indian Ocean) and 401 (North Atlantic Ocean): palaeoceanographic implications Tremolada, Fabrizio
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 107-116
10 p.
article
76 Nannoplankton ecology and palaeoecology YOUNG, J.R.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. vii-ix
nvt p.
article
77 Neogene biofacies in eastern Venezuela and their calibration with seismic data Moreno-Vásquez, Joselys
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 287-297
11 p.
article
78 New examples of holococcolith–heterococcolith combination coccospheres and their implications for coccolithophorid biology Cros, L.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 1-34
34 p.
article
79 No evidence for extreme, long term warming in early Pliocene sediments of the Southern Ocean Burckle, Lloyd H.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 215-226
12 p.
article
80 Oak leaves as biosensors of late neogene and early pleistocene paleoatmospheric CO2 concentrations Kürschner, Wolfram M.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 299-312
14 p.
article
81 Occurrence and distribution of the foraminifer Ammonia beccarii tepida (Cushman) in water bodies, recent and quaternary, of the Dead Sea rift, Israel Almogi-Labin, Ahuva
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 153-159
7 p.
article
82 Opening of the Australia–Antarctica Gateway as dated by nannofossils Wei, Wuchang
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 133-152
20 p.
article
83 Organic-walled dinoflagellate cyst production, composition and flux from 1996 to 1998 in the central Strait of Georgia (BC, Canada): A sediment trap study Pospelova, Vera
2010
86-87 1-4 p. 17-37
21 p.
article
84 Oxygen and carbon isotopic composition of Recent larger and smaller foraminifera from the Madang Lagoon (Papua New Guinea) Langer, Martin R.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 215-221
7 p.
article
85 Palaeobiogeography of Early Cretaceous (Berriasian–Barremian) calcareous nannoplankton Street, C.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 265-291
27 p.
article
86 Phylogenetic incongruence between dinoflagellate endosymbionts (Symbiodinium) and their host foraminifera (Sorites): small-subunit ribosomal RNA gene sequence evidence Langer, Martin R.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 179-186
8 p.
article
87 Pleistocene agglutinated foraminifera from the Lomonosov Ridge and Amundsen Basin, Arctic Basin. Initial report on piston cores 2177-5 (KAL) and 2176-3 (KAL) Evans, John R.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 245-253
9 p.
article
88 Pleistocene fluctuations in the northern Benguela Current system as revealed by coccolith assemblages Baumann, Karl-Heinz
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 195-215
21 p.
article
89 Pliensbachian (Early Jurassic) calcareous nannofossils from the Peniche section (Lusitanian Basin, Portugal): A clue for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions Reggiani, L.
2010
86-87 1-4 p. 1-16
16 p.
article
90 Pliocene and early Pleistocene environments and climates of the western Snake River Plain, Idaho Thompson, Robert S.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 141-156
16 p.
article
91 Pliocene climate of Japan and environs between 4.8 and 2.8 Ma: A joint pollen and marine faunal study Heusser, Linda E.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 85-106
22 p.
article
92 Pliocene climates: the nature of the problem Crowley, Thomas J.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 3-12
10 p.
article
93 Preface: FORAMS '94 Langer, Martin R.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 1-2
2 p.
article
94 Provincialism associated with the Paleocene/Eocene thermal maximum: temporal constraint Kahn, Alicia
2004
86-87 1-4 p. 117-131
15 p.
article
95 Radionuclide dates and foraminiferal accumulation rates: examples from submarine canyons Young, Melinda
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 57-63
7 p.
article
96 Recolonization by deep-sea benthic foraminifera: possible substrate preferences Kitazato, Hiroshi
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 65-74
10 p.
article
97 Seasonal and interannual variation of coccolithophore fluxes and species composition in sediment traps north of Gran Canaria (29°N 15°W) Sprengel, Claudia
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 157-178
22 p.
article
98 Sediment geochemical evidence for an early-middle Gilbert (early Pliocene) productivity peak in the North Pacific Red Clay Province Dickens, Gerald R.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 107-120
14 p.
article
99 Sessile foraminifera of the Hawaiian archipelago: a preliminary survey Burch, Beatrice L.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 161-170
10 p.
article
100 Southeast Atlantic marine and terrestrial response to middle Pliocene climate change Dowsett, Harry
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 181-193
13 p.
article
101 Spatial dynamics of coccolithophore assemblages in the Equatorial Western-Central Pacific Ocean Hagino, K.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 53-72
20 p.
article
102 Stepwise postglacial migration of benthic foraminifera into the abyssal northeastern Norwegian Sea Struck, Ulrich
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 207-213
7 p.
article
103 Taphonomy and time-averaging of foraminiferal assemblages in Holocene tidal flat sediments, Bahia la Choya, Sonora, Mexico (northern Gulf of California) Martin, Ronald E.
1995
86-87 1-4 p. 187-206
20 p.
article
104 Taxon lists for studies of modern nannoplankton Jordan, R.W.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 309-314
6 p.
article
105 Temperature effects on growth and cell size in the marine calcareaous dinoflagellate Thoracospaera heimii Karwath, B
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 43-51
9 p.
article
106 The calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphic framework of the Late Maastrichtian–Danian North Sea chalk Lottaroli, F.
2000
86-87 1-4 p. 239-263
25 p.
article
107 The Pliocene record in the central Arctic Ocean Clark, David L.
1996
86-87 1-4 p. 157-164
8 p.
article
108 The variation of upper ocean structure and paleoproductivity in the Kuroshio source region during the last 200kyr Li, Tiegang
2010
86-87 1-4 p. 50-61
12 p.
article
                             108 results found
 
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