Headon hill biography samples
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Taphonomy of an Eocene micromammal assemblage in a lake-margin depositional setting elucidates an ancient food web
Katerina Vasileiadou, Jerry J. Hooker, and Margaret E. Collinson
Article number: a16
Copyright Palaeontological Association, May
Author biographies
Plain-language and multi-lingual abstracts
PDF version
Submission: 31 January Acceptance: 3 May
ABSTRACT
The taphonomy of the micromammalian assemblage from an unusually widespread lake-margin depositional context in the early Priabonian How Ledge Limestone, Totland Bay Member, Headon Hill Formation, Isle of Wight, UK, was studied in order to understand its method of accumulation, the trophic interrelationships between species and families, and their spatial relationships in the palaeoenvironment. The fossil remains studied consist of mainly dissociated bones and teeth, belonging to 28 species, which show selective anatomical representation and characteristic types of damage (fragmentation, etching, puncture marks),
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Bibliography - Geology of Highcliffe, Barton and Hordle Cliffs
Apart from a bibliographic listing, this is also for references used in the Highcliffe, Barton and Hordle Cliffs webpages. Thus some papper listed here do not refer directly to the Barton area, but may be used for comparison or other purposes. There are a few papper on the adjacent coast of Mudeford and Hengistbury Head, but this area is not covered thoroughly in the present bibliography. See also: |Hengistbury Head - Bibliography
For geological, geomorphological and civil engineering information and photographs regarding Highcliffe, Barton and Hordle Cliff please see:
Highcliffe and Barton - Geological Field Guide
Highcliffe, Barton & Hordle Coast Erosion and Sea Defences
Hordle Cliff - Headon Hill Formation, Solent Group (Eocene)
For additonal references on related subjects please see:
New Forest Bibliography
Isle of Wight Bibliography
Solent Geology Bibl
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Jon L. Breen will need no introduction to readers of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. He is a fiction writer with several novels to his credit and many of his short stories have appeared in EQMM. For today’s blog, though, he draws on his thirty years as reviewer for our long-running book-review column The Jury Box. He retired from full-time wielding of The Jury Box gavel in , but continues to contribute two columns per year. If anyone has a broad overview of the mystery/crime/suspense field, it’s Jon, and he has some insights that many may find surprising.—Janet Hutchings
Memory, both individual and collective, can be a tricky thing. I doubt if anybody has perused more books about mystery and detective fiction (biographies, bibliographies, critical studies, histories) than I have, and even the best of them have occasional errors, sometimes based on the writer’s reliance on memory. For example, Robert L. Gale’s recent Characters and Plots in the Fiction of Raymond