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Teaching Documents about Palynology and Palynofacies
Keith W. Abineri, West Borough, Wimborne, Dorset, UK: THE EXAMINATION OF MICROFOSSILS, NANNOFOSSILS AND OTHER MICROSCOPICAL OBJECTS USING CELLULOSE LACQUER ROCK PEELS.
Alwynne B. Beaudoin, Provincial Museum of Alberta, Edmonton: A CAREER AS A PALYNOLOGIST. See also Highlights from Recent CAP Newsletters. Selected articles online in palynology.
The Botanical Society of America: Online Image Collection. This is a collection of approximately 800 images available for instructional use. The site is run by a search engine database, designed and maintained by Scott Russell; slides scanned by Tom Jurik and Dave Webb. The copyright and any intellectual property rights for these images are retained by the individual donors. Visit Set 10 - Pollen. Slides contributed by Darlene DeMason and Marsh Sundberg.
Britannica Online: Palynology. Britannica Online contains at least 10 items relevant to this query.
The Canadian Heritage Information Network (CHIN): Palynology, Basic Laboratory Chemicals.
! Owen Kent Davis, Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson: Palynology. This page outlines information about palynology in the broadest sense. Go to Palynology Definitions & Illustrations . Excellent!
Danielle Drayton, Department of Biology, University of Miami: Welcome to the Fascinating World of Phylum Dinoflagellata. Information about dinoflagellate morphology, life history and evolution of dinoflagellates.
Terry J. Hutter, TH Geological Services, Inc., Sand Springs, OK, U.S.A.: Palynomorph of the Month.
S. Mager and S. Fitzsimons, Department of Geography, University of Otago: Climate Change of the Past, Introduction to Palaeoclimatology and Sources of Palaeoclimatic Data. Lecture outline. Go to: Lecture 17: Pollen Analysis.
John H. McAndrews, from CAP Newsletter 21(2):23, 1998: Palynological Myths: Monitoring Contamination of Fossil Pollen Preparations.
! Andrew MacRae, Palynology at The University of Calgary Dept. of Geology and Geophysics: What is paleopalynology? Information about preservation and processing samples, spores, pollen and dinoflagellates, and type image repository. See also: Terrestrial palynomorphs -- spores and pollen.
Micropaleontology Press: What is micropaleontology?
W. Punt, S. Blackmore, S. Nilsson and A. Le Thomas (a project of the Working Group on Palynological Terminology, under the auspices of the International Federation of Palynological Societies (IFPS). Second and revised edition by Peter Hoen, Department of Palaeobotany & Palynology, University of Utrecht: Glossary of Pollen and Spore Terminology. The objective of the project has been to provide a concise manual of terminology that can be used to clarify the communication of information concerning pollen grains and spores. Excellent!
Olaf Ronneberger, Lehrstuhl für Mustererkennung und Bildverarbeitung, Institut für Informatik, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg: Automatic Identification and Counting of Airborne Pollen Grains.
O. Ronneberger, U. Heimann, E. Schultz, V. Dietze, H. Burkhardt, R. Gehrig: Automated pollen recognition using gray scale invariants on 3D volume image data. Second European Symposium on Aerobiology, Vienna / Austria, Sept. 5 - 9, 2000.
The Latz Research Laboratory, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, Dinoflagellates: This section describes the life history and ecology of dinoflagellates, and explains how and why they produce bioluminescence. See: What is a Dinoflagellate?
Richard Tyson, Fossil Fuels and Environmental Geochemistry, Newcastle Research Group (NRG), Newcastle: An introduction to palynological fluorescence microscopy.
Richard Tyson, Fossil Fuels and Environmental Geochemistry, Newcastle Research Group (NRG), Newcastle:
Kerogen image gallery index.
These images concentrate mainly on non-palynomorph particulate organic matter, plus
some oil-prone "algal" palynomorphs.
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