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Anne C. Fetrow

Researcher at University of Colorado Boulder

Publications -  11
Citations -  121

Anne C. Fetrow is an academic researcher from University of Colorado Boulder. The author has contributed to research in topics: Canyon & Cretaceous. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 8 publications receiving 32 citations. Previous affiliations of Anne C. Fetrow include University of Puget Sound.

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InterCarb: A Community Effort to Improve Interlaboratory Standardization of the Carbonate Clumped Isotope Thermometer Using Carbonate Standards.

Stefano M. Bernasconi, +73 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide consensus values from the clumped isotope community for four carbonate standards relative to heated and equilibrated gases with 1,819 individual analyses from 10 laboratories.
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Syncontractional deposition of the Cretaceous Newark Canyon Formation, Diamond Mountains, Nevada: Implications for strain partitioning within the U.S. Cordillera

TL;DR: In this article, the Newark Canyon Formation (NCF) was shown to have been deformed by contractional deformation between the Sevier thrust belt in Utah and several structural provinces in the hinterland in Nevada.
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Early Sevier orogenic deformation exerted principal control on changes in depositional environment recorded by the Cretaceous Newark Canyon Formation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify six distinct facies of the Cretaceous Newark Canyon Formation and show that these facies evolved through four stages of deposition: an anastomosing river system with palustrine interchannel areas, a braided river system, a balance-filled, carbonate-bearing lacustrine system, and a second braided system.
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Biotic and Abiotic Forcing During the Transition to Modern Grassland Ecosystems: Evolutionary and Ecological Responses of Small Mammal Communities Over the Last 5 Million Years

TL;DR: In this article, the role of environmental change in the emergence of the modern community was examined using the early Pliocene to latest Pleistocene faunas and sediments in the Meade Basin and modern soils and rodents from the same area.