Paleontology -- Alberta
Label
Paleontology -- Alberta
Name
Paleontology
Focus
Sub focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of25
- The southern plains of Alberta, by D.B. Dowling. --
- Contributions to Canadian palaeontology [1929]
- On Eoceratops canadensis, gen. nov., with remarks on other genera of cretaceous horned dinosaurs
- Contributions to Canadian palaeontology, [1930]
- The dinosaur echo, director, producer, writer, Brandy Yanchyk ; Brandy Y Productions Inc
- Paleoenvironments and cultural dynamics at Head-Smashed-In Buffalo Jump, Alberta, the carbon isotope record, by Neil A. McKinnon. --
- Deep Alberta, fossil facts and dinosaur digs, John Acorn
- Handbook of Canada, Issued by the Local committee on the occasion of the meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science at Toronto, August, 1924
- Contributions to Canadian palaeontology, [November 1926]
- Reading the rocks, a biography of ancient Alberta, Monique Keiran ; Royal Tyrrell Museum
- Dinosaur Provincial Park, by Gordon Reid. --
- Contributions to Canadian palaeontology, [March 1928]
- Victoria Memorial Museum Bulletin
- The Cretaceous theropodous dinosaur Gorgosaurus, by Lawrence M. Lambe
- Dinosaurs upper Edmonton formation near Drumheller, [written by D. A. Taylor, J. E. Storer]
- Hooded Hadrosaurs of the Belly River series of the Upper Cretaceous, by C. M. Sternberg. Musculature and functions in the Ceratopsia by L. S. Russell
- Aboriginal cultures in Alberta, five hundred generations, Susan Berry and Jack Brink
- Dinosaur Provincial Park, land of vanished dinosaurs
- Dinosaur Provincial Park, a spectacular ancient ecosystem revealed, edited by Philip J. Currie and Eva B. Koppelhus
- Contributions to Canadian palaeontology
- Dinosaurs and distant drums, the future for Alberta's heritage resources, prepared by A.G. Landals. --
- Mesozoic palaeontology of Blairmore region, Alberta
- Uppermost Cretaceous and Paleocene non-marine molluscan faunas of western Alberta
- The Hadrosaur Edmontosaurus from the Upper Cretaceous of Alberta
- New species of dinosaurs and turtles from the Upper Cretaceous formations of Alberta. --
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1
- Sub focus1