The Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale Formation 1S a unique deposit hosting a remarkable diversity of soft-bodied and skeletal organisms. This unit onlaps the shallow-water dolomites of the Cathedral Formation which have been cut by a near vertical truncation surface known as the Cathedral Escarpment, a feature continuous for nearly 100 km. An abundant and diverse fauna is known from the classic quarries on Fossil Ridge between Mount Field and Mount Wapta, but other fossiliferous localities are present along the strike of the Cathedral Escarpment. In order to understand the ecological and paleontological basis for lateral variations in faunal composition within the Burgess Shale, exposures 60 km to the southeast of the type area were e...
Konservat-Lagerstätten, or fossil deposits exhibiting exceptional preservation of non-biomineralised...
of deeper water ramp to slope, mixed carbonate, and siliciclastic facies deposited on the northweste...
The stem group priapulid Ottoia Walcott, 1911 is the most abundant worm in the mid Cambrian Burge...
The Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale Formation 1S a unique deposit hosting a remarkable diversity of s...
The 508-million-year-old Burgess Shale (British Columbia) is among the most important fossil localit...
A new Burgess Shale–type assemblage, from the Stephen Formation of the southern Canadian Rocky Mount...
A new Burgess Shale-type assemblage, from the Stephen Formation of the southern Canadian Rocky Mount...
The Cambrian (Series 3, Stage 5) Burgess Shale represents an exceptional window for examining the b...
The Tulip Beds locality on Mount Stephen (Yoho National Park, British Columbia) yields one of the mo...
The Tulip Beds locality on Mount Stephen (Yoho National Park, British Columbia) yields one of the mo...
The Burgess Shale of the Canadian Rocky Mts is one of the most well-known occurrences of Cambrian st...
The Cambrian (Series 3, Stage 5) Burgess Shale represents an exceptional window for examining the b...
The Tulip Beds locality on Mount Stephen (Yoho National Park, British Columbia) yields one of the mo...
The middle (Wuliuan Stage) Cambrian Burgess Shale is famous for its exceptional preservation of dive...
An assemblage if over 9000 systematically collected fossils from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale w...
Konservat-Lagerstätten, or fossil deposits exhibiting exceptional preservation of non-biomineralised...
of deeper water ramp to slope, mixed carbonate, and siliciclastic facies deposited on the northweste...
The stem group priapulid Ottoia Walcott, 1911 is the most abundant worm in the mid Cambrian Burge...
The Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale Formation 1S a unique deposit hosting a remarkable diversity of s...
The 508-million-year-old Burgess Shale (British Columbia) is among the most important fossil localit...
A new Burgess Shale–type assemblage, from the Stephen Formation of the southern Canadian Rocky Mount...
A new Burgess Shale-type assemblage, from the Stephen Formation of the southern Canadian Rocky Mount...
The Cambrian (Series 3, Stage 5) Burgess Shale represents an exceptional window for examining the b...
The Tulip Beds locality on Mount Stephen (Yoho National Park, British Columbia) yields one of the mo...
The Tulip Beds locality on Mount Stephen (Yoho National Park, British Columbia) yields one of the mo...
The Burgess Shale of the Canadian Rocky Mts is one of the most well-known occurrences of Cambrian st...
The Cambrian (Series 3, Stage 5) Burgess Shale represents an exceptional window for examining the b...
The Tulip Beds locality on Mount Stephen (Yoho National Park, British Columbia) yields one of the mo...
The middle (Wuliuan Stage) Cambrian Burgess Shale is famous for its exceptional preservation of dive...
An assemblage if over 9000 systematically collected fossils from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale w...
Konservat-Lagerstätten, or fossil deposits exhibiting exceptional preservation of non-biomineralised...
of deeper water ramp to slope, mixed carbonate, and siliciclastic facies deposited on the northweste...
The stem group priapulid Ottoia Walcott, 1911 is the most abundant worm in the mid Cambrian Burge...