Species shown are representative Formanifera, possible genus Cibicidodes and Crustacea; planktonic Copepods and Isopods. Possible prehistoric origin; provenance unknown. These are to be the first published illustrations of specimens analysed by microscope and separated from particles taken from a sea-bed fauna bearing ecosystem of the North Atlantic
Samples of zooplankton from the ballast water of ships arriving to Atlantic Canad
International audienceThe first serial publication devoted to marine science appears to be a French ...
For the identification of certain of the mollusks with which the copepods to be described were assoc...
Huys, Rony (2016): Enigmas from the past: M'Intosh's (1885) annelidicolous copepods from the voyage ...
The Henry Buckley Collection of Planktonic Foraminifera at the Natural History Museum in London (NHM...
The Natural History Museum's (formerly called, British Museum) ocean bottom deposit collection consi...
International audienceIsopod crustaceans are commonly referred to as woodlice; however, terrestrial ...
This photographic identification guide includes examples or representative forms of the major groups...
This paper presents a quantitative and detailed description of the Fossil Lithistida Collection in t...
In April 1949 Mr. J. A. W. Lucas, a student of Biology and a careful collector of marine animals, su...
The ecological importance of marine zooplankton cannot be overestimated. Throughout the world’s ocea...
The origin and possible antiquity of the spectacularly diverse modern deep-sea fauna has been debate...
Bottom vegetation is known as preferred habitat for many types of meiofauna such as copepods. The co...
FIGURE 6. Leaniricola rotundata M'Intosh, 1885 (♀). A, leg 1, anterior; B, leg 2, anterior; C, leg 3...
This catalogue gives a review of the zoological type material deposited in the Museum of Natural His...
Samples of zooplankton from the ballast water of ships arriving to Atlantic Canad
International audienceThe first serial publication devoted to marine science appears to be a French ...
For the identification of certain of the mollusks with which the copepods to be described were assoc...
Huys, Rony (2016): Enigmas from the past: M'Intosh's (1885) annelidicolous copepods from the voyage ...
The Henry Buckley Collection of Planktonic Foraminifera at the Natural History Museum in London (NHM...
The Natural History Museum's (formerly called, British Museum) ocean bottom deposit collection consi...
International audienceIsopod crustaceans are commonly referred to as woodlice; however, terrestrial ...
This photographic identification guide includes examples or representative forms of the major groups...
This paper presents a quantitative and detailed description of the Fossil Lithistida Collection in t...
In April 1949 Mr. J. A. W. Lucas, a student of Biology and a careful collector of marine animals, su...
The ecological importance of marine zooplankton cannot be overestimated. Throughout the world’s ocea...
The origin and possible antiquity of the spectacularly diverse modern deep-sea fauna has been debate...
Bottom vegetation is known as preferred habitat for many types of meiofauna such as copepods. The co...
FIGURE 6. Leaniricola rotundata M'Intosh, 1885 (♀). A, leg 1, anterior; B, leg 2, anterior; C, leg 3...
This catalogue gives a review of the zoological type material deposited in the Museum of Natural His...
Samples of zooplankton from the ballast water of ships arriving to Atlantic Canad
International audienceThe first serial publication devoted to marine science appears to be a French ...
For the identification of certain of the mollusks with which the copepods to be described were assoc...