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Lower upper cretaceous plant microfossils from Minnesota

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The article was published on 1961-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 161 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Cretaceous.

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Cretaceous angiosperm pollen from the Kachaike Formation, south-western Santa Cruz Province, Argentina

TL;DR: The recorded increase in the number of angiosperm species towards the middle and upper parts of the Kachaike Formation, with the presence of monocolpate, tricolpate), tricolporoidate and tricolporate pollen, suggests an early-early middle Albian age for these parts of this unit, in agreement with the early Albian Age proposed for its basal levels on the basis of dinoflagellates.
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The Pliocene–Pleistocene Palynology of the Negro River, Brazil

TL;DR: A recent opportunity allowed the stratigraphical and palynological study of a sedimentary unit below the Negro River's current channel as mentioned in this paper, which yielded 95 palynomorphs that included 58 pollen and 26 spore species, of which 26 angiosperm, one gymnosperm and four pteridophyte families.
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Monolete spores from the Edmonton formation (Maastrichtian), Alberta (Canada)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors described ten species of monolete spores from the Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) Edmonton Formation of Alberta in Canada and classified them into six form-genera.
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The Cretaceous age of the Vinegar Hill silica sand deposit, southern New Brunswick: evidence from palynology and paleobotany

TL;DR: In this paper, a Mesozoic-early Tertiary age is indicated by the identity of a fossil araucarian wood specimen that occurs within the sand, and palynomorphs suggest a late Early Cretaceous, probably Albian, age.
Journal Article

Palynology and paleoenvironmental significance of the Tunal Formation (Danian) at its type locality, El Chorro creek (Salta, Argentina)

TL;DR: Palinology of samples from the Tunal Formation at El Chorro creek (Salta, Argentina) resulted in the recovery of terrestrial assemblages of pollen and spores associated with freshwater algae (Pediastrum spp. and Scenedesmus sp.).
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Spores and Pollen--a New Stratigraphic Tool for the Oil Industry

TL;DR: The use of spores and pollen as a stratigraphic tool for the oil industry has been investigated in this article, where it has been demonstrated in a number of areas that these fossils occur in adequate numbers for general stratigraphical work.