The Joggins Fossil Cliffs UNESCO World Heritage Site is a Carboniferous coastal section along the shores of the Cumberland Basin, an extension of Chignecto Bay, itself an arm of the Bay of Fundy, with excellent preservation of biota preserved in their environmental context. The Cliffs provide insight into the Late Carboniferous (Pennsylva-nian) world, the most important interval in Earth’s past for the formation of coal. The site has had a long history of scientific research and, while there have been well over 100 publications in over 150 years of research at the Cliffs, discoveries continue and critical questions remain. Recent research (post-1950) falls under one of three categories: general geology; paleobiology; paleoecology. It provid...
The Upper Carboniferous deposit at Westhoughton, UK is a site of exceptional preservation. This site...
The Black Country UNESCO Global Geopark, located in central England, joined the Global Geopark Netwo...
This is the first volume of the Geological Conservation Review (GCR) of Great Britain to be publishe...
The Joggins Fossil Cliffs UNESCO World Heritage Site is a Carboniferous coastal section along the sh...
The Joggins Fossil Cliffs site was selected as a UNESCO World Heritage site because of its unparalle...
Carboniferous strata of the famous Joggins fossil cliffs hold a unique place in the history of geolo...
Carboniferous strata of the famous Joggins fossil cliffs hold a unique place in the history of geolo...
Carboniferous strata of the famous Joggins fossil cliffs hold a unique place in the history of geolo...
This is the first detailed study of the coastal exposure of the Springhill Mines Formation within th...
This is the first detailed study of the coastal exposure of the Springhill Mines Formation within th...
A small area of Duckmantian deposits at Brymbo, Wrexham, in North Wales contains a variety of sedime...
A small area of Duckmantian deposits at Brymbo, Wrexham, in North Wales contains a variety of sedime...
Geoconservation is a burgeoning area of activity within the Earth sciences and the preservation of s...
The 1125-m-thick type section of the Pennsylvanian Boss Point Formation is well exposed along the sh...
The Late Carboniferous Coseley Lagerstätte of the West Midlands, UK, contains exceptionally preserve...
The Upper Carboniferous deposit at Westhoughton, UK is a site of exceptional preservation. This site...
The Black Country UNESCO Global Geopark, located in central England, joined the Global Geopark Netwo...
This is the first volume of the Geological Conservation Review (GCR) of Great Britain to be publishe...
The Joggins Fossil Cliffs UNESCO World Heritage Site is a Carboniferous coastal section along the sh...
The Joggins Fossil Cliffs site was selected as a UNESCO World Heritage site because of its unparalle...
Carboniferous strata of the famous Joggins fossil cliffs hold a unique place in the history of geolo...
Carboniferous strata of the famous Joggins fossil cliffs hold a unique place in the history of geolo...
Carboniferous strata of the famous Joggins fossil cliffs hold a unique place in the history of geolo...
This is the first detailed study of the coastal exposure of the Springhill Mines Formation within th...
This is the first detailed study of the coastal exposure of the Springhill Mines Formation within th...
A small area of Duckmantian deposits at Brymbo, Wrexham, in North Wales contains a variety of sedime...
A small area of Duckmantian deposits at Brymbo, Wrexham, in North Wales contains a variety of sedime...
Geoconservation is a burgeoning area of activity within the Earth sciences and the preservation of s...
The 1125-m-thick type section of the Pennsylvanian Boss Point Formation is well exposed along the sh...
The Late Carboniferous Coseley Lagerstätte of the West Midlands, UK, contains exceptionally preserve...
The Upper Carboniferous deposit at Westhoughton, UK is a site of exceptional preservation. This site...
The Black Country UNESCO Global Geopark, located in central England, joined the Global Geopark Netwo...
This is the first volume of the Geological Conservation Review (GCR) of Great Britain to be publishe...