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A review of Recent and Quaternary organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts of the genus Protoperidinium

Rex Harland
- 01 Jan 1982 - 
- Vol. 25, pp 369-397
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This article is published in Palaeontology.The article was published on 1982-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 60 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Dinoflagellate & Genus.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dinoflagellate Cysts in Recent Marine Sediments from Tasmania, Australia

TL;DR: While Tasmanian dinoflagellate cyst assemblages resemble those of New South Wales, Australia, and New Zealand, one notable difference is the cyst of the toxic Gymnodinium catenatum which appears to be confined to south-eastern Tasmania.
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Modem organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts in arctic marine environments and their (paleo-) environmental significance

TL;DR: This arcticle gives an overview of the ecology of dinoflagellates and their cysts, the processes that transform the living communities into sediment communities, and the environmental gradients that may be reconstructed from fossil dinof lagellate cysts assemblages in the high northern latitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dinoflagellates, Sporomorphs, and Other Palynomorphs from the Upper Pliocene St. Erth Beds of Cornwall, Southwestern England

TL;DR: Palynological analysis of the highly fossiliferous marine clays of the St. Erth Beds of Cornwall has revealed the presence of dinoflagellates, acritarchs and prasinophytes, scolecodonts, microforaminiferal linings, freshwater invertebrates, freshwater algal spores, embryophyte spores and pollen, fungal spores and plant cuticles.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Taxonomic Survey of Cyst-producing Dinoflagellates from Recent Sediments of Victorian Coastal Waters, Australia

TL;DR: Forty-two types of cysts representing fourteen dinoflagellate genera were identified in Recent coastal sediments from Victoria, Australia, introducing a new aspect to the regional distribution of G. catenatüm and twenty-three cyst-theca relationships are described, five of which were previously unknown.

Organic-walled dinoflagellate cysts from surface sediments of Nagasaki Bay and Senzaki Bay,West Japan

TL;DR: In this article, modern dinoflagellate cysts recovered from surface sediments of Nagasaki Bay and Senzaki Bay, West Japan are described under the cyst-based classification.
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