Descrição
The Burke Museum Invertebrate Paleontology and Micropaleontology Collections include 3.6 million specimens and include invertebrate, foraminifera and trace fossils, dating from the Cambrian (around 530 million years ago) to the Quaternary (10,000 years ago). The Burke Museum Invertebrate Paleontology Collection is a member of the NSF-funded Thematic Collection Network (TCN), the Eastern Pacific Invertebrate Communities of the Cenozoic era (EPICC), award number 1503678, and is currently working to digitize its collection.
Registros de Dados
Os dados deste recurso de ocorrência foram publicados como um Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), que é o formato padronizado para compartilhamento de dados de biodiversidade como um conjunto de uma ou mais tabelas de dados. A tabela de dados do núcleo contém 23.281 registros.
Também existem 2 tabelas de dados de extensão. Um registro de extensão fornece informações adicionais sobre um registro do núcleo. O número de registros em cada tabela de dados de extensão é ilustrado abaixo.
This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.
Versões
A tabela abaixo mostra apenas versões de recursos que são publicamente acessíveis.
Como citar
Pesquisadores deveriam citar esta obra da seguinte maneira:
University of Washington Burke Museum Invertebrate Paleontolgy Collection
Direitos
Pesquisadores devem respeitar a seguinte declaração de direitos:
O editor e o detentor dos direitos deste trabalho é University of Washington Burke Museum. To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the Public Domain (CC0 1.0). Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction.
GBIF Registration
Este recurso foi registrado no GBIF e atribuído ao seguinte GBIF UUID: e6033178-5da4-411d-91cf-457683f28b3d. University of Washington Burke Museum publica este recurso, e está registrado no GBIF como um publicador de dados aprovado por GBIF-US.
Palavras-chave
Occurrence; Specimen; Occurrence
Contatos
- Provedor Dos Metadados ●
- Originador ●
- Ponto De Contato
- Geology & Paleontology Collections Manager
- Box 353010
- +1 206-543-6776
- Provedor Dos Metadados
- Provedor Dos Metadados
- Burke Museum EPICC Coordinator
Cobertura Geográfica
The 3.6 million specimens making up the Invertebrate Fossil and Microfossils Collections are arranged stratigraphically. The fossils are mostly marine and include specimens from all over the world, but the emphasis is on material from western North America. Fossils from Washington state include Cambrian trilobites and molluscs, Paleozoic fauna from accreted terrains in the north eastern and north central part of the state, Cretaceous molluscs from the Islands, and a wealth of Cenozoic marine fossils from the coastal regions. The collections also include fossils from investigations into the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, from Europe, Tunisia and Antarctica. The current digitization efforts focus on our collections of the Cenozoic era from the Eastern Pacific, ranging from Alaska to the southern tip of South America. Most of our collections in this range represent specimens from the state of Washington.
Coordenadas delimitadoras | Sul Oeste [-90, -180], Norte Leste [90, 180] |
---|
Cobertura Taxonômica
Approximately half of the invertebrate paleontology collections are mollusks (bivalves, gastropods, ammonoids and nautiloids) from the Cretaceous and Cenozoic of western North American and the Pacific Rim. In addition to the extensive Charles E. Weaver collection of Mesozoic South American material, there are also significant collections from western Europe. Recently donated material includes: comprehensive collection of exhibit-quality decapod crabs and shrimps from the Pacific Northwest collected and donated by Ross Berglund, large collections of mollusks from Fiji and Okinawa collected and donated by Emeritus Professor Alan Kohn, and ammonoids from the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary of Antarctica collected (NSF funded field work) by Peter Ward and his students in 2009 and 2011.
Filo | Mollusca (Molluscs) |
---|
Metadados Adicionais
Identificadores alternativos | e6033178-5da4-411d-91cf-457683f28b3d |
---|---|
http://ipt.vertnet.org:8080/ipt/resource?r=uwbm_invertpaleo |