BETA TEST - Fossil data and pages are very much experimental and under development. Please report any problems
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan
Lat/Long (Decimal) | 37.5,140 |
---|---|
Co-ordinates Derivation | based on political unit |
Mindat.org Region (for given coordinates) | Fukushima Prefecture, Japan |
Collections
Collection | Reference | Stratigraphic Name | Comments | Lithology | Age |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kamitoyo Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 18 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kamitoyo | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kamitoyo Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 19 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kamitoyo | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kamitoyo Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 20 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kamitoyo | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 10 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 11 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 12 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 13 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 14 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 15 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 16 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 17 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 2 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 21 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage Middle part of Kubota formation | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 22 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage upper part of Kubota fm. | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 3 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 4 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 5 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 6 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 7 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 8 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Higashi-Tanakura Group Kubota Fm Molluscan Fauna Locality 9 | Iwasaki Y (1970) | Higashi-Tanakura - Kubota | Higbashi-Tanajura group is a marine representative of the regressive Genjigawa stage | sandstone | 11.608 - 5.333 Ma Miocene |
Recorded Fossils
References
Iwasaki Y (1970) The Shiobara-type Molluscan Fauna: An ecological analysis of fossil molluscs, Journal of the faculty of science, University of Tokyo, Section 2 17 3, 351-444 |
Data courtesy of: PBDB: The Paleobiology Database, Creative Commons CC-BY licenced. , GBIF: the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, various licences, iDigBio, various licences, and EOL: The Encyclopedia of Life (Open Data Public Domain). Because fossils are made of minerals too!