Jefferson Vasconcellos
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A new marine vertebrate assemblage from the Late Neogene Purisima Formation in Central California, part II: Pinnipeds and Cetaceans Robert W. BOESSENECKER Department of Geology, University of Otago, 360 Leith Walk, P.O. Box 56, Dunedin, 9054 (New Zealand) and Department of Earth Sciences, Montana State University 200 Traphagen Hall, Bozeman, MT, 59715 (USA) and University of California Museum of Paleontology 1101 Valley Life Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA, 94720 (USA) [email protected] Boessenecker R. W. 2013. — A new marine vertebrate assemblage from the Late Neogene Purisima Formation in Central California, part II: Pinnipeds and Cetaceans. Geodiversitas 35 (4): 815-940. http://dx.doi.org/g2013n4a5 ABSTRACT e newly discovered Upper Miocene to Upper Pliocene San Gregorio assem- blage of the Purisima Formation in Central California has yielded a diverse collection of 34 marine vertebrate taxa, including eight sharks, two bony fish, three marine birds (described in a previous study), and 21 marine mammals. Pinnipeds include the walrus Dusignathus sp., cf. D. seftoni, the fur seal Cal- lorhinus sp., cf. C. gilmorei, and indeterminate otariid bones. Baleen whales include dwarf mysticetes (Herpetocetus bramblei Whitmore & Barnes, 2008, Herpetocetus sp.), two right whales (cf. Eubalaena sp. 1, cf. Eubalaena sp. 2), at least three balaenopterids (“Balaenoptera” cortesi “var.” portisi Sacco, 1890, cf. Balaenoptera, Balaenopteridae gen. et sp. indet.) and a new species of rorqual (Balaenoptera bertae n. sp.) that exhibits a number of derived features that place it within the genus Balaenoptera. is new species of Balaenoptera is relatively small (estimated 61 cm bizygomatic width) and exhibits a comparatively nar- row vertex, an obliquely (but precipitously) sloping frontal adjacent to vertex, anteriorly directed and short zygomatic processes, and squamosal creases. -
Reef-Coral Fauna of Carrizo Creek, Imperial County, California, and Its Significance
THE REEF-CORAL FAUNA OF CARRIZO CREEK, IMPERIAL COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, AND ITS SIGNIFICANCE . .By THOMAS WAYLAND VAUGHAN . INTRODUCTION. occur has been determined by Drs . Arnold and Dall to be lower Miocene . The following conclusions seem warranted : Knowledge of the existence of the unusually (1) There was water connection between the Atlantic and interesting coral fauna here discussed dates Pacific across Central America not much previous to the from the exploration of Coyote Mountain (also upper Oligocene or lower Miocene-that is, during the known as Carrizo Mountain) by H . W. Fair- upper Eocene or lower Oligocene . This conclusion is the same as that reached by Messrs. Hill and Dall, theirs, how- banks in the early nineties.' Dr. Fairbanks ever, being based upon a study of the fossil mollusks . (2) sent the specimens of corals he collected to During lower Miocene time the West Indian type of coral Prof. John C. Merriam, at the University of fauna extended westward into the Pacific, and it was sub- California, who in turn sent them to me . sequent to that time that the Pacific and Atlantic faunas There were in the collection representatives of have become so markedly differentiated . two species and one variety, which I described As it will be made evident on subsequent under the names Favia merriami, 2 Stephano- pages that this fauna is much younger than ctenia fairbanksi,3 and Stephanoccenia fair- lower Miocene, the inference as to the date of banksi var. columnaris .4 As the geologic hori- the interoceanic connection given in the fore- zon was not even approximately known at that going quotation must be modified . -
Appendices D Through I
Appendix D Operation & Maintenance Appendix D. Operation and Maintenance Plan Operation and Maintenance Plan This document presents the operation and maintenance (O&M) plan for Western Area Power Administration’s (Western) Sierra Nevada Region (SNR) transmission line systems. 1.0 Inspection/System Management In compliance with Western’s Reliability Centered Maintenance Program, Western would conduct aerial, ground, and climbing inspections of its existing transmission infrastructure since initial construction. The following paragraphs describe Western’s inspection requirements. Aerial Inspections Aerial inspections would be conducted a minimum of every 6 months by helicopter or small plane over the entire transmission system to check for hazard trees1 or encroaching vegetation, as well as to locate damaged or malfunctioning transmission equipment. Typically, aerial patrols would be flown between 50 and 300 feet above Western’s transmission infrastructure depending on the land use, topography, and infrastructure requirements. In general, the aerial inspections would pass over each segment of the transmission line within a one-minute period. Ground Inspections Annual ground inspections would check access to the towers/poles, tree clearances, fences, gates, locks, and tower hardware, and ensure that each structure would be readily accessible in the event of an emergency. They would allow for the inspection of hardware that would not be possible by air, and identify redundant or overgrown access roads that should be permanently closed and returned to their natural state. Ground inspections would typically be conducted by driving a pickup truck along the ROW and access roads. Detailed ground inspections would be performed on 20 percent of all lines and structures annually, for 100 percent inspection every 5 years. -
Deep Sea Drilling Project Initial Reports Volume 13
M. HAJOS 34.5. THE MEDITERRANEAN DIATOMS Marta Hajos, Hungarian Geological Institute, Budapest, Hungary INTRODUCTION species. The relevant information has been obtained from the references cited at the end of this chapter and from Ten washed samples taken at eight levels from the drill investigations of Hungarian fossiliferous localities. cores of the Mediterranean expedition of the Deep Sea The 175 taxa investigated belong primarily to the phyla Drilling Project were sent for study to the present writer by Chrysophyta and Bacillariophyta, and are accompanied in Paulian Dumitrica of the Geological Institute, Bucharest, subordinate numbers by representatives of Phytolitharia, Rumania. He had found these samples to be the richest Acritarcha, Radiolaria and Porifera. diatom-bearing sediments both in terms of species and The paleoecological assignments shown in Table 1 and individuals. the complete floral spectrum allow three paleo-ecological Two samples from Core 13 of Site 124—Balearic Rise1 divisions, representing three areas of the Mediterranean and were selected near levels of finely laminated dolomitic three different sedimentary facies, to be distinguished. marls with dark green to black interbeds. This dolomitic unit is part of the evaporite series cored in the deep Balearic Division 1 — Siliceous Dolomitic Marls of Site 124 Basin. All six samples from Sites 127 and 128 in the 2 Hellenic Trench of the Ionian Basin are from layers of The sediments of the two samples from Site 124 dark sapropelitic ooze, where the siliceous microfauna is (124-13-2, 89-90 cm and 124-13-2, 127-129 cm) were particularly abundant. The remaining two samples are from apparently deposited under the same ecological conditions. -
Sediment Provenance and Dispersal of Neogene–Quaternary Strata of the Southeastern San Joaquin Basin and Its Transition Into the GEOSPHERE; V
Research Paper THEMED ISSUE: Origin and Evolution of the Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane GEOSPHERE Sediment provenance and dispersal of Neogene–Quaternary strata of the southeastern San Joaquin Basin and its transition into the GEOSPHERE; v. 12, no. 6 southern Sierra Nevada, California doi:10.1130/GES01359.1 Jason Saleeby1, Zorka Saleeby1, Jason Robbins2, and Jan Gillespie3 13 figures; 2 tables; 2 supplemental files 1Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA 2Chevron North America Exploration and Production, McKittrick, California 93251, USA 3Department of Geological Sciences, California State University, Bakersfield, California 93311, USA CORRESPONDENCE: jason@ gps .caltech .edu CITATION: Saleeby, J., Saleeby, Z., Robbins, J., and ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION Gillespie, J., 2016, Sediment provenance and dis- persal of Neogene–Quaternary strata of the south- eastern San Joaquin Basin and its transition into We have studied detrital-zircon U-Pb age spectra and conglomerate clast The Sierra Nevada and Great Valley of California are structurally coupled the southern Sierra Nevada, California: Geosphere, populations from Neogene–Quaternary siliciclastic and volcaniclastic strata and move semi-independently within the San Andreas–Walker Lane dextral v. 12, no. 6, p. 1744–1773, doi:10.1130/GES01359.1. of the southeastern San Joaquin Basin, as well as a fault-controlled Neo- transform system as a microplate (Argus and Gordon, 1991; Unruh et al., 2003). gene basin that formed across the southernmost Sierra Nevada; we call this Regional relief generation and erosion of the Sierra Nevada are linked to sub- Received 9 May 2016 Accepted 31 August 2016 basin the Walker graben. -
USGS Professional Paper 1740
Age, Stratigraphy, and Correlations of the Late Neogene Purisima Formation, Central California Coast Ranges By Charles L. Powell II1, John A. Barron1, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki1, Joseph C. Clark2, Frank A. Perry3, Earl E. Brabb4, and Robert J. Fleck1 Abstract Counties inland to the San Andreas Fault (fig. 1). These scat- tered outcrops have been grouped as the Purisima Formation The Purisima Formation is an important upper Miocene because they are all fine- to coarse-grained clastic rocks, with and Pliocene stratigraphic unit in central California, cropping dark andesitic fragments and locally abundant silicic tephra, out from the coast at Point Reyes north of San Francisco to and occupy the same stratigraphic position at their various more extensive exposures in the Santa Cruz Mountains to the exposures. Since first described by Haehl and Arnold (1904), south. The fine-grained rocks in the lower parts of the Puri- the Purisima Formation has been considered to be of Pliocene sima Formation record a latest Miocene transgressive event, or of late Miocene to Pliocene age. Differing age assignments whereas the middle and upper parts of the formation consist have resulted from the wide stratigraphic range of many com- of increasingly clastic-rich siltstones and sandstones resulting monly encountered megafossils and from the lack of agree- from uplift of adjacent coastal regions and the Sierra Nevada ment on the placement of the Miocene-Pliocene Series bound- during Pliocene transgressive and regressive sea-level events. ary between the provincial megafaunal chronology and that Exposures of the Purisima occur in three different, fault- of international usage. -
Geology and Ground-Water Features of the Edison-Maricopa Area Kern County, California
Geology and Ground-Water Features of the Edison-Maricopa Area Kern County, California By P. R. WOOD and R. H. DALE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY WATER-SUPPLY PAPER 1656 Prepared in cooperation with the California Department of Heater Resources UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE, WASHINGTON : 1964 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR STEWART L. UDALL, Secretary GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Thomas B. Nolan, Director The U.S. Geological Survey Library catalog card for tbis publication appears on page following tbe index. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, D.C. 20402 CONTENTS Page Abstract______________-_______----_-_._________________________ 1 Introduction._________________________________-----_------_-______ 3 The water probiem-________--------------------------------__- 3 Purpose of the investigation.___________________________________ 4 Scope and methods of study.___________________________________ 5 Location and general features of the area_________________________ 6 Previous investigations.________________________________________ 8 Acknowledgments. ____________________________________________ 9 Well-numbering system._______________________________________ 9 Geography ___________________________________________________ 11 Climate.__-________________-____-__------_-----_---_-_-_----_ 11 Physiography_..__________________-__-__-_-_-___-_---_-----_-_- 14 General features_________________________________________ 14 Sierra Nevada___________________________________________ 15 Tehachapi Mountains..---.________________________________ -
3D Geologic Modeling of the Southern San Joaquin Basin for the Westcarb Kimberlina Demonstration Project- a Status Report
LLNL-TR-412487 3D Geologic Modeling of the Southern San Joaquin Basin for the Westcarb Kimberlina Demonstration Project- A Status Report J. Wagoner April 24, 2009 Disclaimer This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States government. Neither the United States government nor Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, nor any of their employees makes any warranty, expressed or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States government or Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States government or Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes. This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344. 3D Geologic Modeling of the Southern San Joaquin Basin for the Westcarb Kimberlina Demonstration Project- A Status Report Wagoner, Jeffrey L. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Atmospheric, Earth and Energy Division P.O. Box 808, Livermore, CA 94551 ABSTRACT The objective of the Westcarb Kimberlina pilot project is to safely inject 250,000 t CO2/yr for four years into the deep subsurface at the Clean Energy Systems (CES) Kimberlina power plant in southern San Joaquin Valley, California. -
Gastropoda:Muricidae
The malacologicalsocietymalacological society of Japan Jeur. Malac,) fi re VENUS {Jap. - Vol, 5z No. 3 ( l99g): 2e9 223 Originand Biogeographic History of Ceratostoma (Gastropoda: Muricidae) Kazutaka AMANo and Geerat J. VERMEIJ of943ofGeoscience. Jbetsu Uhiversity oj' EZIucation. i2xmayashiki-1. Jbetsu, MigataDqpartmentPrellercture, -85i2 Japan, and Department of Geolegy and Center for Population Uitiversity Calijbrnia at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616 USABiology Abstract: We examined the two Neogene species of the ocenebrine muricid gastropod genus Ceratostoma Herrmannsen, 1846, from Japan and North Korea, namely, C. makiyamai The (Hatai & Kotaka, 1952) and C. sp,, both from the early middle Miecene. genus Ceratostotna is divisible into fouT groups based on C. nuttalli (Conrad), C. virginiae (Maury), C, fotiatum (Gemelin), and C. rorijIuum (Adams & Reeve). Three Miocene species from Kamehatka assigned by Russian workers to Ceratostoma are difficult to evaluate owing to poor preservation. Purpura turris Nomland, from the Pliecene of California, which was assigned to Ceratostoma by earlicr authors, is here tentatively assigned to Crassilabrum Jousseaume, 1880, have arisen the the early Miocene, it The genus Ceratostoma may in Atlantic. By had reached California, and then spTead westward to northeast Asia by earLy middle Mio- Miocene ccne time. This pattern of east to west expansion during the early half of the also characterizes many other north-temperate marine genera, including the ocenebrine NiiceUa. Keywords: origin, biogeography, Ceratostoma, Muricidae Introduction muricid Ceratostoma liye in shallow Recent species of the ocenebrine gastropod genus waters on both sides of the temperate and boreal North Pacific. There are six living species: C nuttaUi (Conrad) from California and Baja California, C. -
Qt53v080hx.Pdf
UC Berkeley PaleoBios Title A new Early Pliocene record of the toothless walrus Valenictus (Carnivora, Odobenidae) from the Purisima Formation of Northern California Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/53v080hx Journal PaleoBios, 34(0) ISSN 0031-0298 Author Boessenecker, Robert W. Publication Date 2017-06-15 DOI 10.5070/P9341035289 Peer reviewed eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California PaleoBios 34:1-6, June 15, 2017 PaleoBios OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA MUSEUM OF PALEONTOLOGY Boessenecker, Robert W. (2017). A New Early Pliocene Record of the Toothless Walrus Valenictus (Carnivora, Odobenidae) from the Purisima Formation of Northern California. Cover photo: Life restoration of the extinct Pliocene walrus Valenictus and flightless auks (Mancalla) hauled out on the rocky shore of the uplifted Coast Ranges of California (top right); cliff exposures of the Purisima Formation near Santa Cruz, from where Valenictus was collected by Wayne Thompson (left); bivalves, chiefly Clinocardium meekianum, exposed in the Purisima Formation near the locality (bottom). Photo credit and original artwork: Robert W. Boessenecker. Citation: Boessenecker, Robert W. 2017. A New Early Pliocene Record of the Toothless Walrus Valenictus (Carnivora, Odobenidae) from the Puri- sima Formation of Northern California. PaleoBios, 34. ucmp_paleobios_35289 A New Early Pliocene Record of the Toothless Walrus Valenictus (Carnivora, Odobenidae) from the Purisima Formation of Northern California ROBERT W. BOESSENECKER1,2 1Department of Geology and Environmental Geosciences, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC 29424; [email protected] 2University of California Museum of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720 The walrus (Odobenus rosmarus) is a large tusked molluskivore that inhabits the Arctic and is the sole living member of the family Odobenidae. -
Active Tectonics at Wheeler Ridge, Southern San Joaquin Valley, California
Active tectonics at Wheeler Ridge, southern San Joaquin Valley, California E. A. Keller* Environmental Studies Program and Department of Geological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106 R. L. Zepeda 1342 Grove Street, Alameda, California 94501 T. K. Rockwell Department of Geological Sciences, San Diego State University, San Diego, California 91282 T. L. Ku Department of Earth Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-0740 W. S. Dinklage Department of Geological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106 ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION where geomorphic surfaces are folded over the anticlinal axis (Zepeda et al., 1986). In addition, Wheeler Ridge is an east-west–trending Buried reverse faults associated with actively the 1952 Kern County earthquake was centered anticline that is actively deforming on the up- deforming folds are known to produce large earth- below Wheeler Ridge, but not on the Wheeler per plate of the Pleito–Wheeler Ridge thrust- quakes. Several recent, large California earth- Ridge thrust fault; therefore the potential earth- fault system. Holocene and late Pleistocene de- quakes are examples: M = 6.7, Northridge, 1994; quake hazard in the area is clear. formation is demonstrated at the eastern end M = 6.1, Whittier Narrows, 1987; MS = 6.4, The primary goals of the research at Wheeler of the anticline where Salt Creek crosses the Coalinga, 1983, and MS = 7.7, Kern County, Ridge are (1) to characterize the tectonic geomor- anticlinal axis. Uplift, tilting, and faulting, as- 1952. Detailed investigations of folding associ- phology; (2) to develop the Pleistocene chronol- sociated with the eastward growth of the anti- ated with concealed reverse faults are therefore ogy; and (3) to test the hypothesis that climatic cline, are documented by geomorphic surfaces necessary in order to better understand earthquake perturbations are responsible for most Pleistocene that are higher and older to the west. -
Summary of North American Blancan Nonmarine Mollusks1
MALACOLOGIA , 1966, 4(1): 1-172 SUMMARY OF NORTH AMERICAN BLANCAN NONMARINE MOLLUSKS1 D. W. Taylor U. S. Geological Survey, and Research Associate, University of Michigan Museum of Zoology, Ann Arbor, Michigan, U. S. A. ABSTRACT All known North American nonmarine mollusks of Blancan (late Pliocene and early Pleistocene) age have been here fitted into the available framework of associated fossils, physical stratigraphy and radiogenic potassium-argon dates. Many of the independently dated molluscan assemblages are so similar to other faunas that most of the fossils summarized can be assigned confidently to the Blancan age. These assignments permitted compilation of lists of last appear- ances of genera and families that are unknown during or after Blancan times. About 50-55 Blancan assemblages are known, and together with about 10-15 older or younger faunas included for convenience of discussion they are summarized under 57 local geographic headings (map, Fig. 1). For each local assemblage the following data have been given so far as possi- ble: location, previous references to mollusks, stratigraphic unit and most recent geologic maps, number of species of mollusks, mention of other fossils from the same locality or formation, age, institution where fossils are preserved, and most recent topographic maps. The detail of treatment varies widely, according to available information, progress of knowledge since previous liter- ature and the usefulness of new information. Lists of species are included usually only if the fauna is revised or first recorded in this paper, but the references to previous work are intended to be complete. The Blancan faunas from the Great Plains region (Nebraska, Kansas, Okla- homa, Texas), and from Arizona, are generally similar and include mainly widespread living species.