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Featured researches published by Ft Banner.


Journal of the Geological Society | 1997

The Cretaceous-Tertiary biotic transition

Norman MacLeod; Peter F. Rawson; Peter Forey; Ft Banner; Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Paul R. Bown; Ja Burnett; P. Chambers; Stephen J. Culver; S. E. Evans; Charlotte H. Jeffery; Michael A. Kaminski; Alan Lord; Angela C. Milner; A. R. Milner; N.J. Morris; E. Owen; B. R. Rosen; Andrew B. Smith; Paul D. Taylor; E. Urquhart; Jeremy R. Young

Mass extinctions are recognized through the study of fossil groups across event horizons, and from analyses of long-term trends in taxonomic richness and diversity. Both approaches have inherent flaws, and data that once seemed reliable can be readily superseded by the discovery of new fossils and/or the application of new analytical techniques. Herein the current state of the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) biostratigraphical record is reviewed for most major fossil clades, including: calcareous nannoplankton, dinoflagellates, diatoms, radiolaria, foraminifera, ostracodes, scleractinian corals, bryozoans, brachio-pods, molluscs, echinoderms, fish, amphibians, reptiles and terrestrial plants (macrofossils and palynomorphs). These reviews take account of possible biasing factors in the fossil record in order to extract the most comprehensive picture of the K-T biotic crisis available. Results suggest that many faunal and floral groups (ostracodes, bryozoa, ammonite cephalopods, bivalves, archosaurs) were in decline throughout the latest Maastrichtian while others (diatoms, radiolaria, benthic foraminifera, brachiopods, gastropods, fish, amphibians, lepidosaurs, terrestrial plants) passed through the K-T event horizon with only minor taxonomic richness and/or diversity changes. A few microfossil groups (calcareous nannoplankton, dinoflagellates, planktonic foraminifera) did experience a turnover of varying magnitudes in the latest Maastrichtian-earliest Danian. However, many of these turnovers, along with changes in ecological dominance patterns among benthic foraminifera, began in the latest Maastrichtian. Improved taxonomic estimates of the overall pattern and magnitude of the K-T extinction event must await the development of more reliable systematic and phylogenetic data for all Upper Cretaceous clades.


Revue de Micropaléontologie | 1999

Revision of the stratigraphic significance of the oligocene-miocene “Letter-Stages”

Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Ft Banner

Abstract A new correlation is proposed between the “Letter Stages” of the Far East, the Planktonic Foraminiferal Zones of the Oligocene-Miocene and the European Stages. Constructive criticisms are invited.


Journal of Micropalaeontology | 1998

On the evolution of the Hedbergellidae from the Praehedbergellidae

Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Ft Banner; Tn Gorbachik; M. D. Simmons; John E. Whittaker

In order to establish the relationship between the smooth, microperforate praehedbergellid forms of the genus Blefuscuiana with the younger, macroperforate and muricate forms typical of Hedbergella, two similar taxa but with the different characters of the two genera, are studied here: Blefuscuiana praetrocoidea (Kretchmar & Gorbachik) and its descendant Hedbergella trocoidea (Gandolfi), the type species of Hedbergella, and which typifies the Hedbergellidae. B. praetrocoidea was only found in the Early Aptian in the North Tethys. H. trocoidea ranges from the Late Aptian to Early Albian (?M. Albian) and is a cosmopolitan species. It evolves into Ticinella roberti (Gandolfi), a Late Aptian–Albian species with fused portici. The evolution of the Praehedbergellidae into the Hedbergellidae appears to be related to a relative sea-level rise in the Late Aptian and Albian (and the opening of the Proto-Atlantic) which provided a number of deep-water niches which the Hedbergellidae occupied.


Revue de Micropaléontologie | 1997

Socotraina, a new hauraniid genus from the upper lias of the Middle East (Foraminifera, Textulariina)

Ft Banner; John E. Whittaker; Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Andrew Samuel

Abstract A new and distinctive genus of hauraniid foraminifera has been found in Liassic rocks of the island of Socotra (Yemen) and of the United Arab Emirates; both are believed to be of Toarcian age.


Chapman & Hall: London. (1997) | 1997

Early Evolutionary History of Planktonic Foraminifera

Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Ft Banner; John E. Whittaker


Archive | 1997

The Jurassic Favusellacea, the earliest Globigerinina

M. D. Simmons; Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Ft Banner; John E. Whittaker


Revue de Paleobiologie , 19 (1) pp. 137-156. (2000) | 2000

Some Miogypsinidae (foraminifera) in the Miocene of Borneo and nearby countries

Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Alan Lord; Ft Banner


Paleopelagos , 7 pp. 3-16. (1997) | 1997

The revision of some genus-group names in Tethyan Lepidocyclininae

Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Ft Banner


Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie - Abhandlungen , 201 (2) pp. 243-258. (1996) | 1996

Evolution in the early Cretaceous planktonic foraminiferal genus Blefuscuiana

Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel; Ft Banner; Tn Gorbachik; Simmons; John E. Whittaker


Greifswalder Geowissenschaftliche Beiträge , 6 pp. 503-515. (1999) | 1999

The Terra Limestones Member (Miocene) of Western Cyprus.

Ft Banner; Alan Lord; Marcelle K. BouDagher-Fadel

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Alan Lord

University College London

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Tn Gorbachik

Moscow State University

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E. Urquhart

University College London

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Ja Burnett

University College London

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Jeremy R. Young

University College London

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