5,753 research outputs found
Figure 1 in Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado
Figure 1. Upper Cretaceous dinosaur localities in Denver Basin (landform map modified from Raisz, 1957). See Appendix 1 for locality numbers and included taxa.Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 238, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Figure 3 in Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado
Figure 3. (Caption on facing page.)Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 238, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Figure 7 in Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado
Figure 7. Left maxilla of Edmontosaurus sp. (UCM 18953) from Laramie Formation. Scale bar = 10 cm.Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 241, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Gordon, Bruce, July 16 and August 6, 2020 [Interview]
Bruce Gordon was interviewed on July 16 and August 6, 2020, by Devin McKinney about his youth, his education at Gettysburg College, his years as a Gettysburg College trustee, and his tenure as president and CEO of the NAACP.Parsons, Philip; Hyman, James; Haas, Eugene; Hummel, R. Eugene; Reider, Ray; Martin Luther King, Jr.; Jones, W. Ramsey; Jones, Bill; Mott, Kenneth F.; Smoke, Kenneth L.; Bloom, Robert L.; Moore, Carey A.; Vannorsdall, John W.; Ward, Jim; Lowenthal, Lawrence D.; Glassick, Charles E.; Haaland, Gordon A.; Zimmerman, Irvin; Glover, Buddy; Cummings, Elijah E.; Bush, George W.Carl Arnold Hanson Years; Charles E. Glassick Years; Gordon A. Haaland Years
Boenau, A. Bruce, April 1, 2011 [Interview]
A. Bruce Boenau was interviewed on April 1, 2011 by C. Brendan Marquet about his background in international affairs (specifically his service in India and work in Germany) and his experiences as a professor at Gettysburg College, where he witnessed the political unrest of the 60s on campus.Von Manteuffel, Hasso; Eisenhower, Dwight D.; Hanson, Carl Arnold; Mott, Kenneth F.Carl Arnold Hanson Years; Charles E. Glassick Year
Thescelosaurus Gilmore 1913
Suborder ORNITHISCHIA Family THESCELOSAURIDAE Thescelosaurus sp. Material. -UCM 38757, 38758 teeth (Laramie Formation, Loc. 4). Description and discussion.— These teeth were previously described by Carpenter (1979) as cheek teeth. No new information is available for them.Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 246, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Hadrosauridae Cope 1869
Family HADROSAURIDAE The vast majority ofthe hadrosaur specimens from the Laramie and Denver Formations cannot be identified below family level. At least two genera, Edmontosaurus and Anatotitan, are known from the coeval Lance and Hell Creek Formations making it impossible to refer the mostly fragmentary specimens from the Denver Basin to either genus. An exception is a pair of maxillae, described below.Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 246, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Pachycephalosaurus Brown & Schlaikjer 1943
PACHYCEPHALOSAURIDAE cf. Pachycephalosaurus sp. Figure 16 Material. — DMNH 32649 portion of skullcap (Denver Formation, Loc. 20). Description and discussion. — A portion of thickened parietal is all that is present of the skull roof (Fig. 16). The bone is very dense, making identification as pachycephalosaurid certain. The outer surface is moderately grooved; no nodes are present on the specimen, indicating that the fragment is not from the periphery of the skull.Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 247, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Edmontosaurus Lambe 1917
Figure 7 Material. — UCM 18953 pair of maxillae (Laramie Formation, Loc. 2). Description and discussion. —A pair of hadrosaur maxillae is referred to Edmontosaurus sp. rather than Anatotitan because the ascending process of the maxilla is above the midpoint of the tooth row in Anatotitan; it is anterior to the midpoint in Edmontosaurus. Furthermore, the ratio of the length of the maxilla to the maximum height is greater in Anatotitan than in Edmontosaurus. These maxillae were mentioned previously by Toepleman (1935), Lull and Wright (1942), and Carpenter (1979).Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 246, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
Ceratopsipes goldenensis Lockley & Hunt 1995
Material.— CU-MWC 220.1 pes track (Laramie Formation, Loc. 10); CU-MWC 220.2 pes track (Laramie Formation, Loc. 10); CU-MWC 220.3 manus track (Laramie Formation, Loc. 10); CU-MWC 220.5 manus track (Laramie Formation, Loc. 10); CU- MWC 220.6 pes (Laramie Formation, Loc. 10); and footprints (Laramie Formation, Loc. 10). Lockley and Hunt (1995) identified quadrupedal tracks from the lower part ofthe Laramie Formation as ceratopsian (genus unknown), an identification that seems reasonable because the tracks appear to be too large for ankylosaurs (Fig. 12).Published as part of Kenneth Carpenter & D. Bruce Young, 2002, Late Cretaceous dinosaurs from the Denver Basin, Colorado, pp. 237-254 in Rocky Mountain Geology 37 on page 249, DOI: 10.2113/gsrocky.37.2.237, http://zenodo.org/record/394308
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