1959 in paleontology

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Paleontology or palaeontology is the study of prehistoric life forms on Earth through the examination of plant and animal fossils.[1] This includes the study of body fossils, tracks (ichnites), burrows, cast-off parts, fossilised feces (coprolites), palynomorphs and chemical residues. Because humans have encountered fossils for millennia, paleontology has a long history both before and after becoming formalized as a science. This article records significant discoveries and events related to paleontology that occurred or were published in the year 1959.

Arthropods[]

Newly named insects[]

Name Novelty Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes Images

[2]

Sp nov

valid

Rice

Ypresian

Driftwood Shales

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly

[2]

Sp nov

valid

Rice

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Sp nov

valid

Rice

Ypresian

Driftwood Shales

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly

Plecia canadensis[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb and syn nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]
Senior synonym of (1910)[2]

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb nov

jr synonym

(Scudder)

Priabonian

Florissant Formation

 United States
 Colorado

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1892)[4]
Moved to (1999)[5]

[2]

Sp nov

valid

Rice

Ypresian

Coldwater Beds

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly

[2]

Sp nov

valid

Rice

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb and syn nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]
Senior synonym of , , & (1910)[2]

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb and syn nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]
Senior synonym of (1910)[2]

[2]

Comb nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]

[2]

Comb and syn nov

valid

(Handlirsch)

Ypresian

""

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly
Moved from (1910)[3]
Senior synonym of & (1910)[2]

[2]

Sp nov

valid

Rice

Ypresian

Allenby Formation

 Canada
 British Columbia

A bibionid fly

Conodonts[]

German paleontologist Klaus J. Müller (1923-2010) described the conodont family Westergaardodinidae.[6]

Name Novelty Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes Images

Dollymae[7]

valid

Hass

Carboniferous

Type species D. sagittula

Furnishina[6]

Gen et sp nov.

valid

Müller

Cambrian

Type species F. furnishi

Hertzina[6]

valid

Müller

Cambrian

Type species H. bisulcata

Westergaardodina[6]

Gen et sp nov

valid

Müller

Cambrian

Type species W. bicuspidata

Archosauromorphs[]

Incertae sedis[]

Name Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes Images

Palaeosauriscus[8]

Junior synonym

  • Kuhn

Late Triassic

Junior synonym of Palaeosaurus.

Newly named pseudosuchians[]

Name Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes Images

Clarencea[9]

Junior synonym

  • Brink

Early Jurassic (Hettangian-Sinemurian)

Newly named dinosaurs[]

Data courtesy of George Olshevsky's dinosaur genera list.[10]

Name Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes Images
Chialingosaurus[11] Valid taxon.

Late Jurassic (Bathonian-Callovian)

A stegosaur.

Pachysauriscus[8]

Junior synonym

  • Kuhn

Late Triassic (Norian)

Junior synonym of Plateosaurus.

Plesiosaurs[]

Newly named Plesiosaurs[]

Name Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes

Stretosaurus

Nomen dubium

Tarlo

Late Jurassic (Kimmeridgian)

A dubious pliosaurid belonging to Thalassophonea.

Birds[]

Newly named birds[]

Name Novelty Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes Images

Anthropodyptes [12]

Gen. et Sp. nov.

valid

Simpson

Middle Miocene,

 Australia

A Spheniscidae, type species A. gilli

[13]

Gen. nov. et Sp. nov.

valid

Brodkorb

Pleistocene-Late Holocene

Banana Hole, New Providence Island

 Bahamas

A Picidae, type species B. hyphalus.

[13]

Sp. nov.

valid

Brodkorb

Pleistocene-Late Holocene

Banana Hole, New Providence Island

 Bahamas

A Burhinidae.

Caracara creightoni [13]

Sp. nov.

valid

Brodkorb

Pleistocene

Banana Hole, New Providence Island

 Bahamas

A Falconidae.

[14]

Sp. nov.

valid

Brodkorb

Middle Pleistocene

Reddics beds, Arredondo clay

 USA Florida

An Odontophoridae.

[14]

Gen. et Sp. nov.

valid

Brodkorb

Middle Pleistocene

Arredondo clay

 USA Florida

An Icteridae, type species C. tytthus.

[15]

Gen. et Sp. nov.

valid

Holman

Pleistocene

Arredondo clay

 USA Florida

A Corvidae, type species H. brodkorbi.

Falco readei [14]

Sp. nov.

synonym

Brodkorb

Pleistocene

Arredondo clay

 USA Florida

A Falconidae, moved to Milvago readei.

[16]

Gen. et Sp. nov.

valid

Tordoff

Pliocene

Rexroad Formation

 USA  Kansas

A Cathartidae, type species P. fisheri

[17]

Sp. nov.

synonym

Early Eocene

Colton Formation

 USA Utah

A Presbyornithidae, moved to .

Pterosaurs[]

New taxa[]

Name Status Authors Age Unit Location Notes

Titanopteryx

Preoccupied

Arambourg

Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian)

Phosphate deposits

Later renamed Arambourgiana Nesov, Kanznyshkina, and Cherepanov, 1987

References[]

  1. ^ Gini-Newman, Garfield; Graham, Elizabeth (2001). Echoes from the past: world history to the 16th century. Toronto: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd. ISBN 9780070887398. OCLC 46769716.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Rice, H. M. A (1959). "Fossil Bibionidae (Diptera) from British Columbia". Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin. 55: 1–36.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Handlirsch, A. (1910). "Canadian fossil Insects. 5. Insects from the Tertiary lake deposits of the southern interior of British Columbia, collected by Mr. Lawrence M. Lambe". Contributions to Canadian Palaeontology. 2 (3): 93–129.
  4. ^ Scudder, S. H. (1892). "Some Insects of special interest from Florissant, Colorado and other points in the Tertiaries of Colorado and Utah". Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey. 93: 1–25.
  5. ^ Fitzgerald, S. J. (1999). "A new species of Plecia from the Green River Formation and new combinations of fossil Bibionidae (Diptera)". Great Basin Naturalist. 59: 182–187.
  6. ^ a b c d Kambrische conodonten. KJ Müller, Zeitschrift der deutschen geologischen Gesellschaft, 1959, volume 111, pages 434-485 (URL at Schweizerbart Science Publishers, Stuttgart, Germany
  7. ^ Conodonts from the Chappel limestone of Texas. Wilbert H. Hass, 1959
  8. ^ a b Kuhn, O. 1959. Ein neuer Microsaurier aus dem deutschen Rotliegenden. N. Jb. Geol. Palaeontol. Mh. 1959: pp. 424-426;
  9. ^ Brink, A.S. 1959. A new small thecodont from the Red Beds of the Stormberg series. Palaeontologia Africana 6: pp. 109–115.
  10. ^ Olshevsky, George. "Dinogeorge's Dinosaur Genera List". Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  11. ^ Young C.-C. 1959. On a new Stegosauria from Szechuan, China. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 3: pp. 1-8.
  12. ^ Simpson, George Gaylord (1959). "A New Fossil Penguin from Australia". Proceedings of the Royal Society Victoria. 71: 113–119.
  13. ^ a b c Pierce Brodkorb (1959). "Pleistocene Birds from New Providence Island, Bahamas". Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences. 4 (11): 349–371.
  14. ^ a b c Pierce Brodkorb (1959). "The Pleistocene Avifauna of Arredondo, Florida". Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences. 4 (9): 269–291.
  15. ^ J. Alan Holman (1959). "Birds and Mammals from the Pleistocene of Williston, Florida". Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences. 5: 1–24.
  16. ^ Harrison B. Tordoff (1959). "A Condor from the Upper Pliocene of Kansas". Condor. 61: 338–343. doi:10.2307/1365126.
  17. ^ John William Hardy (1959). "A Previously Undescribed Recurvirostrid from the Eocene of Utah". Auk. 76 (9): 106–108.
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