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Geologic formation in India
Nimar Sandstone Formation is a geological formation from the Cenomanian of India.[1][2][3]
Genus |
Species |
Material |
Notes |
Photos
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Titanosauria[4]
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Indeterminate
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Partial Skeleton Including a femur, humerus, radius, ulna and numerous fragmentary bones belonging at least to two individuals
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A new titanosaur species, possibly ancestral to the titanosaurs known from abundant remains from the Lameta Formation of peninsular India.
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Dinosauria[4]
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Indeterminate
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"Fragmentary pieces of bones"
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Too poorly preserved to identify.
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Genus |
Species |
Material |
Notes
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Ostreidae
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Indeterminate
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- ^ Omnath Saha; Uma Kant Shukla (November 2016). "Depositional environment of Nimar Sandstone of Cretaceous Bagh Group, Dhar District, M.P., India". 33rd Convention of Indian Association of Sedimentologists.
- ^ Bhattacharya, Biplab; Jha, Suparna; Mondal, Prantik (December 2020). "Palaeogeographic reconstruction of a fluvio-marine transitional system in Narmada rift basin, India — Implications on Late Cretaceous global sea-level rise". Journal of Palaeogeography. 9 (1): 30. Bibcode:2020JPalG...9...30B. doi:10.1186/s42501-020-00078-6. ISSN 2524-4507.
- ^ Akhtar, K.; Ahmad, A. H. M. (1 April 1991). "Single-cycle cratonic quartzarenites produced by tropical weathering: the Nimar sandstone (Lower Cretaceous), Narmada basin, India". Sedimentary Geology. 71 (1): 23–32. Bibcode:1991SedG...71...23A. doi:10.1016/0037-0738(91)90004-W. ISSN 0037-0738.
- ^ a b https://www.researchgate.net/publication/244484466_First_dinosaur_remains_from_the_Cenomanian-Turonian_Nimar_Sandstone_Bagh_Beds_District_Dhar_Madhya_Pradesh_India