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  • 1
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    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 142, pp. 1-1
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The intention of this Lyell Meeting is to bring together tectonicists, geologists, palaeontologists and geomorphologists to discuss the intersection of their specialisms in the geology of islands.
    Keywords: Lyell meetings ; islands ; geology ; palaeontology ; tectonics ; evolution ; isolation
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 2
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    In:  Scripta Geologica. Special Issue vol. 08, pp. 1-4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The south-western Indian Ocean islands, excluding the microcontinent of Madagascar, are geologically complex and diverse. They have been subject to drastic sea level changes, volcanic events and anthropogenic changes, all of which have contributed to confuse understanding of their avian biogeography. An array of factors have affected these avifaunas, based on palaeontological, historical and molecular evidence,which together have shown that avian biogeography is not congruent with the relative age and size of the islands.
    Keywords: macrofossils ; Cretaceous ; Maastrichtian ; Mesozoic ; geology ; palaeontology
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
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    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 136, pp. 107-112
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: James speculated that Paleogene \xe2\x80\x98flysch-wildflysch\xe2\x80\x99 deposits of the Caribbean region may all have a related genesis associated with one or more bolide impacts. The principal arguments used to promote this idea were: (1) that many successions may have been dated incorrectly and are actually related to the end Cretaceous (K/T) event and/or other bolide impacts; and (2) common olistostromes may have been transported by impact-related phenomena. The deposits discussed by James included the Richmond and Font Hill formations of Jamaica. The Richmond Formation of the Wagwater Belt is Paleogene, not Cretaceous, and olistostromic blocks are a common feature of the sedimentary succession of Jamaica. No extraterrestrial event need be invoked to support their deposition.
    Keywords: Jamaica ; Paleogene ; Richmond Formation ; tectonics ; K/T event
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 4
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    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 134, pp. 109-118
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The main purpose of a research paper in palaeontology, or any scientific discipline, is to spread information within the field. In this paper, suggestions are made concerning the structure and organisation of systematic palaeontological papers, using the Echinoidea as an example. A comprehensive table of echinoid morphological features is presented. It is intended that authors following these guidelines will be facilitated in writing research papers that enable expeditious retrieval of information.
    Keywords: systematics ; description ; Echinoidea
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: This research introduces a Geographical Information Systems (GIS) model that predicts the location and relative susceptibility of humid subtropical hillslopes to sheetwash erosion. The extent of the erosion was based on the conservation potential of the existing vegetation cover. This is an original deductive and deterministic model (Potential Erosion Detection, PED) incorporating regionally applicable physical and land use factors thought to be influential. These were climate (agroclimatic zones), topography (aspect and slope angle), soil (texture, drainage, depth, aggregation), vegetation cover and land use (tillage activity). \nThe study looked at surface erosion as a perceived problem in a post-colonial economy. The processes, cause and effect of erosion were considered, and socio-economic factors discussed. Data collection and the design of the model recognised potential errors and uncertainties. \nThis research was initiated in the upper basin of the Buff Bay River (Portland) in the Blue Mountains of Jamaica. The results revealed a steep terrain, erodible soils and half of the watershed had little understorey and low litter levels. The dominance of coffee ensured that just under half of the research area had soils that were regularly disturbed. The model estimated that 30 % of the upper watershed had the potential for moderate to extreme erosion, contrasting with much higher previous estimates. The statistical dominance of each factor was analysed, showing that soil erodibility dominated the top erosion classes, followed by slope angle, then land use. Alternative soil and vegetative cover parameters for application of the model to other watersheds were also compared. \nThe reliability of the model was analysed using a number of local empirical relationships between erosion and influential factors. The erosion stake Cumulative Erosion Potential values were not significantly related to the PED model scores, but limited results differentiation weakened this approach. The research met two of the three objectives and provided an important preliminary conservation model for the local agencies involved in watershed management.
    Keywords: Jamaica ; Buff Bay ; Geographical Information Systems ; IDRISI ; geomorphology ; soil ; erosion
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 6
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    In:  Scripta Geologica. Special Issue vol. 7, pp. 43-52
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A distinctive chert erratic pebble found on the beach at Overstrand, north Norfolk, eastern England, is a Derbyshire screwstone. Such cherts are typical of the Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) limestones of the southern Pennines (White Peak), over 200 km to the northwest. It was most probably transported by fluvial or glacial action during the Pleistocene and was recently disinterred by coastal erosion. The most diagnostic feature of screwstone cherts are the included mouldic crinoid ossicles, particularly columnals. Columnals of the monobathrid camerate crinoid Megistocrinus? globosus? (Phillips) are described from this screwstone; these have a circular outline, central pentagonal lumen and a raised perilumen. The uncertainty of the identification is due not only to the indifferent preservation of the columnals, but also to our poor knowledge of the morphology of the stems of all the nominal crinoids from the Mississippian of the White Peak.
    Keywords: beachcombing ; provenance ; Neogene ; Carboniferous ; Megistocrinus
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 7
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    In:  Scripta Geologica. Special Issue vol. 7, pp. 1-11
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Contents\n\n- Introduction\n- Son of a famous family\n- The student years\n- Curator and science manager\n- A brachiopod life\n- Acknowledgements\n- Principal scientific publications of Cor Winkler Prins\n\nIntroduction\nSilent respect. It is the way the Cornelius Winkler Prins treated the world, and often the way that the world treated him. It is the silent man that is easily overseen, but, in our opinion, it is the modest scientist that should never be forgotten.
    Keywords: Cor Winkler Prins ; geologist ; biography
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 8
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    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 129, pp. 159-167
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Collections in museums usually have boxes of specimens which remain \xe2\x80\x98undiscovered\xe2\x80\x99 and yet which may be of importance or interest. The recent rediscovery of specimens of Archaeocidaris in the Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum, Leiden, from the Carboniferous of Egypt illustrates this point. These specimens were collected in 1938 by Dr. H.M.E. Sch\xc3\xbcrmann (1891-1979), who had been a student of Professor J. Wanner (1878-1956), the noted expert on fossil echinoderms. The Egyptian Archaeocidaris plates include interambulacrals and radioles. These are closest to Archaeocidaris rossica (von Buch) from the Moscow area of Russia, although there are sufficient differences in radiole morphology to suggest that they are not necessarily conspecific.
    Keywords: systematics ; echinoids ; Archaeocidaris ; Carboniferous ; Egypts
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Recently discovered crabs from the Middle to Upper Eocene of northern Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles, include well-preserved carapaces of Montezumella rutteni Van Straelen, originally described from an incomplete holotype. The more comprehensive description of this species provided herein includes documentation of the first attributable left cheliped of Montezumella. From the same locality, Ocalina sublevis sp. nov. considerably extends the known geographic range of this genus. Both of these Tethyan decapod genera apparently migrated west from the Mediterranean region during the Eocene. Despite these new determinations, decapod crustaceans remain poorly known from the Eocene of the Antillean islands. Additionally, Callianassa pustulosa Withers from the Eocene basal complex of Barbados is tentatively reassigned to Callichirus.
    Keywords: Crustacea ; Decapoda ; systematics ; Eocene ; Bonaire ; Netherlands Antilles
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Geology has been taught at the University of the West Indies, Mona, since 1961. The associated Geology Museum (UWIGM) opened to the public in 1969/1970, although the idea for such a museum was over 100 years old at that time. The collections of the UWIGM share many hazards with those in museums in other parts of the world, such as dust, insect pests and indifferent specimen records, and some that are less common, such as earthquakes and hurricanes. The curatorship is not tenured. Since the mid 1980s the UWIGM has become a more dynamic visitor attraction in many ways, shaking off its \xe2\x80\x98old-fashioned\xe2\x80\x99 appearance and expanding the displays to include, for example, its first mounted vertebrate skeleton. An aggressive collections policy involves establishing a type and figured collection, supplemented by rearranged historical collections, such as that of the 19th century geologist Lucas Barrett (1837-1862), and improving holdings of significant Antillean groups such as Cretaceous rudist bivalves, which includes part of the collection of Lawrence J. Chubb (1887-1971).
    Keywords: University of the West Indies ; Jamaica ; geology ; museums ; collections
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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