2006
DOI: 10.3133/ofr20061250
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A USGS Zonal Table for the Upper Cretaceous Middle Cenomanian--Maastrichtian of the Western Interior of the United States Based on Ammonites, Inoceramids, and Radiometric Ages

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Cited by 191 publications
(199 citation statements)
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“…Ammonites are also a textbook example of an index fossil; besides being abundant and widespread, they evolved rapidly, making them the dominant Mesozoic tool for relative dating and correlation of shallow water strata. For example, the 35-My-long stratigraphic record of Upper Cretaceous deposits in the US Western Interior Seaway (WIS) has been partitioned into 66 ammonite zones (7). Finally, ammonites underwent a spectacular extinction at the close of the Mesozoic.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ammonites are also a textbook example of an index fossil; besides being abundant and widespread, they evolved rapidly, making them the dominant Mesozoic tool for relative dating and correlation of shallow water strata. For example, the 35-My-long stratigraphic record of Upper Cretaceous deposits in the US Western Interior Seaway (WIS) has been partitioned into 66 ammonite zones (7). Finally, ammonites underwent a spectacular extinction at the close of the Mesozoic.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…D. stephensoni was not identified at Botellos, but E. jenneyi is present and correlates to the lower-middle E. jenneyi Zone of the upper Campanian in the Western Interior (Cobban et al 2006).…”
Section: Paleontological Recordmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…6A-C fig. 9 shows the Middle and Upper Turonian zonal scheme for southern Europe proposed by Robaszynski and Amédro in Robaszynski et al (2014), with the relative positions of Coilopoceras springeri (based on occurrences in the Uchaux Massif and the southern Corbières) and C. inflatum (the present record), and the zonal scheme and occurrence data for the United States Western Interior (based on Hook 1980 andCobban et al 2006 rope, where they co-occur with elements of the bravaisianus Zone fauna of Robaszynski et al (2014), including Subprionocyclus brannneri (Anderson, 1902), S. hitchinensis (Billinghurst, 1927), and Hyphantoceras reussianum (d 'Orbigny, 1850).…”
Section: Repositories Of Specimensmentioning
confidence: 97%