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Palæozoic
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Palæozoic
Palæozoic, a. Geol. (ˌpæliːəʊˈzəʊɪk, ˌpeɪliː-) Also paleo-. [f. palæo-, paleo- + Gr. ζωή life, ζω-ός living + -ic.] 1. Characterized by, containing, or pertaining to ancient forms of life. As introduced by Sedgwick, in 1838, it was applied to the Cambrian and Silurian strata; as extended by Phillips...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Lasanius
—Notes on Palœozoic fishes.—No. II, Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 2:7, 67–70, DOI: 10.1080/00222939808678013
Traquair, R. (1899). XXXII.
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pre-palæozoic
pre-palæozoic, -palatal, -ine see pre- B. 1 b, 3.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Permo-Carboniferous
References
Isbell JL, Lenaker PA, Askin RA, Miller MF, Babcock LE (2003) Reevaluation of the timing and extent of late Palæozoic glaciation in Gondwana
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Mesozoic
Mesozoic, a. Geol. (mɛsəʊˈzəʊɪk) [f. Gr. µέσο-ς middle + ζῷον animal + -ic.] The name given by Phillips to the secondary period, intermediate between the Palæozoic and the Cainozoic.1840 J. Phillips in Penny Cycl. XVII. 154/1 Corresponding terms (as Palæozoic, Mesozoic, Kainozoic, &c.) may be made, ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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archibenthal
archibenthal, a. (ɑːkɪˈbɛnθəl) [f. mod.L. archibenthos, f. archi- + Gr. βένθος depth + -al1.] Belonging to or inhabiting the archiˈbenthos, or depths of the primitive (palæozoic) ocean.1904 Science 7 Oct. 463 The archibenthal species..have a greater range than those restricted to..the shallow waters...
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Frederick Norman Green
Published works
The older Palæozoic Succession of the Duddon Estuary (London, 1913)
Note on the Correlation of the Ingleton Slates (London, 1917)
The Vulcanicity
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Dipterus
‖ ˈDipterus Palæont. [mod.L., f. Gr.: see dipter.] A genus of Palæozoic dipnoous fishes, having two dorsal fins, opposite the ventral and anal respectively. Hence dipˈterian a. and n., belonging to, or a member of, this genus.1842 H. Miller O.R. Sandst. (ed. 2) 103 The Dipterus or double-wing, of th...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Theodora Lisle Prankerd
L. (1912), On the Structure of the Palæozoic Seed Lagenostoma ovoides, Will.
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pale-
palæchinoid, pale-, a. and n. Zool. (pæliːˈkaɪnɔɪd) [f. mod.L. Palæchinoidea, f. Palæchinus (for Palæechinus), name of the typical genus, f. Gr. παλαιός (see palæo-) + ἐχῖνος sea-urchin, echinus.] a. adj. Belonging to the extinct division (Palæchinoidea) of Sea-urchins (Echinoidea), whose fossil rem...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Neozoic
Neozoic, a. Geol. (niːəʊˈzəʊɪk) [f. neo-, after Palæozoic.] 1. Belonging to the later period of geological history; post-palæozoic (comprising both Mesozoic and Cainozoic).1854 E. Forbes in Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. X. p. lxxix, Both the palæozoic and the after—I must coin a word—neozoic mollusca. 1854 Mu...
Oxford English Dictionary
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goniatitic
goniatitic, a. Palæont. (ˌgəʊnɪəˈtɪtɪk) [f. Goniatite n. + -ic 1.] Pertaining to or characteristic of a goniatite or goniatites; spec. designating the simple ‘wavy’ or angular suture line typical of fossil goniatites.1884 Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. XXII. 305 The more ancient forms remain longer in...
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premeridian
premeridian, a. (priːməˈrɪdɪən) [pre- B. 1 a.] Occurring before noon; in Geol., applied by H. D. Rogers to the seventh of his fifteen subdivisions of the Palæozoic strata of the Appalachian chain.1858 [see postmeridian a. 2]. 1859 Page Geol. Terms.
Oxford English Dictionary
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postmeridian
postmeridian, a. (pəʊstməˈrɪdɪən) [ad. L. postmerīdiānus (contr. pōmer-) adj., in the afternoon, f. post after + merīdiānus meridian a.; cf. pomeridian.] 1. Occurring after noon or midday; of or pertaining to the afternoon. Also fig.1626 Bacon Sylva §57 An over hasty digestion, which is the inconven...
Oxford English Dictionary
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tubulose
tubulose, a. (ˈtjuːbjʊləʊs) [ad. mod.L. tubulōs-us, f. L. tubulus tubule.] 1. = next, 1. Now rare.1713 J. Petiver in Phil. Trans. XXVIII. 203 Small tubulose Scarlet Flowers. 1752 J. Hill Hist. Anim. 268 The Trigla, with a bifid rostrum, and tubulose nostrils. 1826 Kirby & Sp. Entomol. IV. xlvi. 312 ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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