2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Paleontology (Posters) II - Paleoecology, Taphonomy, and Traces

249 Paleontology (Posters) II - Paleoecology, Taphonomy, and Traces



Tuesday, 7 October 2008: 8:00 AM
George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall E
153
Is the Proximal Gulf of Mexico a Modern Analog for the Middle Cambrian House Embayment?
Marty Erwin, University of Nevada Las Vegas; Steve Rowland, University of Nevada-Las Vegas
157
Taphonomic and paleoecologic aspects of the Early Devonian (Pragian) Tarrantine Formation near Jackman, Maine
Emily D. Colin, Colby College; Rachel G. Daly, Colby College; Catherine L. Delano, Colby College; Stephanie B. Grocke, Colby College; Caroline G. Hunt, Colby College; Taylor M. Kilian, Colby College; Sophia S. Newbury, Colby College; Amanda M. Smith; Robert A. Gastaldo, Colby College
158
What Are We Really Counting When We Enumerate Species?
Nicole Bonuso, California State Univeristy, Fullerton
159
A Conulariid Fauna from the Fort Payne Formation, (Mississippian, Osagean) of Central Tennessee
Robert C. Ford, Austin Peay State University; Daniel L. Frederick
160
New Perspectives on Faunal Analyses of the Mississippian Michigan Formation, Western Michigan
Nathan R. Noll, Grand Valley State University; Patricia E. Videtich, Grand Valley State University; William J. Neal, Grand Valley State University
161
Destruction of a (TEXAS) Pennsylvanian Goniatite Nursery-the East MOUNTAIN Shale
José G. Salinas, University of Houston-Downtown; Glen K. Merrill, University of Houston-Downtown
164
Detecting Coordinated Stasis by Model Ranking
John C. Handley, Xerox Corporation; H. David Sheets, Canisius College
165
A Taphonomic Study of Early Triassic Fossil Fishes from Vega-Phroso Siltstone Member of the Sulphur Mountain Formation, British Columbia, Canada
Karen A. Anderson, California State University, Fullerton; Adam D. Woods, California State University, Fullerton
166
Taphonomy In Blue Paleosols and Its Implications for the Biostratigraphy of Vertebrate Taxa In the Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona, USA
Katharine M. Loughney, University of Rhode Island; William G. Parker, Petrified Forest National Park; David E. Fastovsky, Univ of Rhode Island
167
Paper Withdrawn
168
Paleoenvironmental Settings and Characteristics of Early Cretaceous Dinosaur Footprints of San Juan Raya, Southern Mexico
Angeles Verde-Ramírez, UNAM; Gilberto Silva-Romo, UNAM; Claudia C. Mendoza-Rosales, UNAM
171
Ecological Structure of the Molluscan Fauna of the Plio-Pleistocene Caloosahatchee Formation of Florida
Christy C. Visaggi, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Gregory M. Burzynski, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Julie A. Kemble, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Kaitlin M. Ofalt, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Stephanie D. White, University of North Carolina Wilmington; Patricia H. Kelley, University of North Carolina Wilmington
172
Are Museum Collections Adequate to Test the Escalation Hypothesis?: A Preliminary Case Study Using the Plio-Pleistocene Strombus Alatus Species Complex from Florida
Mary Elizabeth Kosloski, Cornell University; Gregory P. Dietl, Paleontological Research Institution; Gregory S. Herbert, University of South Florida
173
A New Outline Method to Identify Specialized Shell-Wedging Behavior In Gastropod Mollusks
Ursula E. Smith, Cornell University; Gregory P. Dietl, Paleontological Research Institution
174
Predator-Induced Shell Damage in Bivalves from the Middle Devonian
Judith Nagel-Myers, Paleontological Research Institution; Gregory P. Dietl, Paleontological Research Institution; Carl Brett, University of Cincinnati
175
AN Experimental Assessment of Penetration, Excavation and Consumption RATES of the Muricid Gastropod, Nucella Lamellosa
Devapriya Chattopadhyay, University of Michigan; Tomasz K. Baumiller, University of Michigan
177
The Microstructural Record of Predation: A New Approach for Identifying Predatory Drill Holes
James D. Schiffbauer, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Yurena Yanes, University of Georgia; Carrie L. Tyler, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Michal Kowalewski, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Lindsey R. Leighton, San Diego State University
178
Lacustrine Shell Accumulations in Continental Rifts: Actualistic Examples of Depositional Style and Taphonomy from the Littoral of Lake Tanganyika, East Africa
Michael M. McGlue, University of Arizona; Michael J. Soreghan, University of Oklahoma; John Mischler, Penn State University; Christine S. O'Connell, Stanford University; Oceana S. Castaneda, Dartmouth College; Richard J. Hartwell, Fayetteville Manlius High School; Ellinor Michel, The Natural History Museum; Jonathan Todd, The Nat History Museum; Andrew S. Cohen, University of Arizona; Kiram E. Lezzar, University of Arizona
179
Is It Modern on the Surface? – Time-Averaging Estimates from the West Florida Shelf Using Amino Acid Racemization from Chione (Bivalvia)
Julie Y. McKnight, University of South Florida; Eric Oches, University of South Florida; Greg Herbert, University of South Florida; Peter Harries, University of South Florida
180
Morphologic Variation in Upper Pleistocene Demosponge Biostromes, Miami, Florida: Paleoecologic Implications
Andrea L. Gohl, Smith College; Kevin J. Cunningham, U.S. Geological Survey; H. Allen Curran, Smith College
181
Bryozoan Colonial Growth Form and Habitat Selection
Steven J. Hageman, Appalachian State Univ; Frank K. McKinney, Appalachian State Univ; Andrej Jaklin, Rudjer Boskovic Institute
182
Avian Incipient “Monomorphichnus” in Modern Dune and Ephemeral Pond Environments
Fernando Muñiz, Universidad de Huelva; José A. Gámez Vintaned, Universidad de Zaragoza