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189 D10. Paleontology, Paleoecology/Taphonomy (Posters)
Author Availability:
9:00–11:00 a.m.Presentations
| Booth No. | Paper No. | Title | Presenting Author | Action | 86 | 189-1 | Low-cost photoluminescence approaches for large paleontological samples | Bruno Becker-Kerber | View | 87 | 189-2 | Pyrolysis-GC-MS and supervised machine learning suggest that 2.52 Ga organic matter may hold fragmentary biomolecular evidence of photoautotrophy | Andrea Corpolongo | View | 88 | 189-3 | Environmental Controls on Niche Space Occupation and Feeding Ecology of Late Ordovician (Katian) Crinoid Communities | Nicolas Bell | View | 89 | 189-4 | Paleoecology of Late Devonian Hydrocarbon Seeps Dominated by Brachiopods (Moroccan Meseta) | Evan Hoeft | View | 90 | 189-5 | Cryptic Behavior in Some Middle Devonian (Givetian) Microconchid Tubeworms from Western New York State | James R. Thomka | View | 91 | 189-6 | Dacryoconarids from the Genundewa Limestone, Frasnian (Upper Devonian), western New York State | Emma Johnson | View | 92 | 189-7 | Faunal Census and Biostratigraphy of a Bioherm from the Fort Payne Formation (Lower Mississippian), Clay County, Tennessee | Anna Franklin | View | 93 | 189-8 | Microfacies Analysis of a Late Triassic Sponge Reef: Insights from the Mufara Formation, Sicily | Julian Walicki | View | 94 | 189-9 | A Look into the Relationship Between Late Triassic Vertebrate Fossil Assemblage and the Sedimentary Environments of the Dockum Group in the Texas Panhandle | Madison Crowns | View | 95 | 189-10 | The Nature of the Jurassic-Cretaceous Boundary Transition: Palaeoecological Change within the Stony Creek Formation of the Great Valley Sequence (California, USA) | Samuel Little | View | 96 | 189-11 | When San Antonio was an ocean: the first record of mosasaurs from Late Cretaceous (late Early-early Middle Campanian) chalk deposits in San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas | Thomas Adams | View | 97 | 189-12 | Cretaceous Line Dance: Documenting the Formation and Deposition of a Theropod Dinosaur Trackway from the Upper Glen Rose Formation, Hamilton County, Central Texas, USA | Evan Cerna | View | 98 | 189-13 | Extracting 3D Morphometric Data from Submerged Tracks in Glen Rose Formation (Albian, Early Cretaceous), Blanco, Texas | Dianna Price | View | 99 | 189-14 | Using Avian Neoichnology to Reconstruct Ancient Lacustrine Ecosystems of the Jurassic Moenave Formation in Southern Utah | Jennifer Crowell | View | 100 | 189-15 | Did Pinnipeds With Different Modes of Locomotion Inhabit Different Paleoenvironments? | Peyton Hoyt | View | 101 | 189-16 | PROTISTAN BROMOLITES, COPROLITES, AND COLOLITES: CELLULAR ASPECTS AND POTENTIAL MICROPALEONTOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE | Samuel Bowser | View | 102 | 189-17 | Spiral Coprolites from the Smokey Hill Chalk Member of the Niobrara Formation | Mathias Lobb | View | 103 | 189-18 | CT Scans of Live-collected Abra segmentum (Semelidae) Evaluate the use of Gymnophallid Trematode-Bivalve Traces as a Proxy for Prevalence in the Paleontological Context | Hyungjoo Jang | View | 104 | 189-19 | The incipient fossil record of trematode parasitism of the economically important bivalve Cerastoderma from the Dutch North Sea Coast | Arctic Grosvenor | View | 105 | 189-20 | Effect of Improved Water Quality on Molluscan Communities in Long Island Sound | Gregory Dietl | View | 106 | 189-21 | Carbonate Stable Isotopes of Bivalve Shell Fragments and Their Viability as a Seasonal Environmental Recorder | David Ward | View | 107 | 189-22 | Evidence for a C3 PACMAD-dominated Grassy Ecosystem in Late Miocene Central Australia | Benjamin Lloyd | View | 108 | 189-23 | Invertebrate Fauna of the Oligocene Sooke Formation Sheds Light on the Paleoenvironment of Behemotops proteus (Mammalia, Desmostylia) | Carmella Stewart | View | 109 | 189-24 | Skulls by the Seashore: New Specimens of Cynomys with Insights into the Taphonomy of Late Pleistocene Fossils Found on McFaddin Beach, Texas. | Patrick Lewis | View | 110 | 189-25 | Assessing the Impact of Dataset Bias in Understanding Small Mammal Communities: A Comparison of Trapping and Owl Pellet Data From the Koanaka Hills, Botswana | Charlotte Hohman | View | 111 | 189-26 | Under the Brush: A Preparation Case Study on a Rhinocerotid Cranium from the John Day Formation (Crook County, Oregon, USA) | Andrea Quintanilla | View |
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Paleontology, Paleoecology/Taphonomy (Posters)
Description
Date and Time: Tuesday, 21 Oct - 8:00 AM (Central Time (US & Canada))
Room: HBGCC, Hall 1
Session Type: Poster: Discipline
Session Format: Poster
Author Availability: 9:00–11:00 a.m.
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