Browsing by Author "Kaisen, Peter C."
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Item The Ankylosauridae, a new family of armored dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous. Bulletin of the AMNH ; v. 24, article 12.(New York : Published by order of the Trustees, American Museum of Natural History, 1908) Brown, Barnum.; Kaisen, Peter C.Item A gigantic ceratopsian dinosaur, Triceratops maximus, new species. American Museum novitates ; no. 649(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1933) Brown, Barnum.; Kaisen, Peter C.Item Mounted skeleton of Triceratops elatus. American Museum novitates ; no. 654(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1933) Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 1857-1935.; Brown, Barnum.; Kaisen, Peter C.; Sternberg, Charles H. (Charles Hazelius), b. 1850.Item A new crocodilian from the Belly River beds. American Museum novitates ; no. 1202(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1942) Mook, Charles Craig, 1887-1966.; Brown, Barnum.; Kaisen, Peter C.Item A new longhorned Belly River ceratopsian. American Museum novitates ; no. 669(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1933) Brown, Barnum.; Kaisen, Peter C.Item A Pleistocene flora from Fairbanks, Alaska. American Museum novitates ; no. 887(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1936) Chaney, Ralph Works, 1890-; Mason, H. L. (Herbert Louis), 1896-; Kaisen, Peter C.; Frick Vertebrate Paleontology Expedition (1929-1931)Item Some frozen deposits in the goldfields of interior Alaska : a study of the Pleistocene deposits of Alaska. American Museum novitates ; no. 525(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1932) Wilkerson, Albert S. (Albert Samuel), 1897-1963.; Kaisen, Peter C.; Frick Vertebrate Paleontology Expedition (1929-1931)"A description of the frozen deposits in the vicinity of Fairbanks, Alaska, is given. The deposits consist of muck, sand, gravel, peat, volacanic ash and pure ice. The materials, other than the ash and ice, are shown to be of slope-wash and fluviatile origin. A large percentage of the ice is of glacial origin. The volcanic ash is the first to have been found in the region, and its probable source is discussed. The deposits contain large quantities of bones of Pleistocene vetebrates"--P. [1].Item Three new Theropoda, Protoceratops zone, central Mongolia. American Museum novitates ; no. 144(New York City : The American Museum of Natural History, 1924) Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 1857-1935.; Kaisen, Peter C.; Olsen, George, d. 1939.; Central Asiatic Expeditions (1921-1930)