about the geologic subperiod passenger train Pennsylvanian Amtrak Carboniferous stages The Pennsylvanian is, in the International Commission on Stratigraphy ICS geologic timescale , the younger of two period geology subperiods or upper of two system stratigraphy subsystems of the Carboniferous Period. It lasted from roughly Period span Pennsylvanian Ma million years ago . As with most other geochronology geochronologic units, the stratum rock beds that define the Pennsylvanian are well identified, but the exact date of the start and end are uncertain by a few million years. The Pennsylvanian is named after the American state of Pennsylvania , where rocks with this age are widespread. ref name Gradstein The division between Pennsylvanian and Mississippian comes from North American stratigraphy. In North America , where the early Carboniferous beds are primarily marine limestone s, the Pennsylvanian was in the past treated as a full fledged geologic period between the Mississippian and the Permian . In Europe , the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian are one more or less continuous sequence ... and Pennsylvanian the rank of subperiods, subdivisions of the Carboniferous Period. Life Image US pennsylvanian general.jpg thumb right Generalized geographic map of the United States in middle Pennsylvanian time. Fungi All modern class biology classes of fungi were present in the Pennsylvanian ... Pennsylvanian between the Moscovian and the Kasimovian removed many amphibian species that did ... year 2010 title Rainforest collapse triggered Pennsylvanian tetrapod diversification in Euramerica journal ... accessdate 2012 03 30 ref Subdivisions The Pennsylvanian has been variously subdivided. The international ... starts earlier than the Pennsylvanian and is divided in three ages Namurian corresponding ... Carboniferous Pennsylvanian.htm The Pennsylvanian Epoch of the Carboniferous Period 318 to 299 ... pt Pennsylvaniano simple Pennsylvanian sh Pennsylvanij fi Pennsylvania kausi uk zh ... more details
Infobox rail service box width 30em name Pennsylvanian image Amtrak Pennsylvanian at Bryn Mawr, PA.jpg image width 300px caption The Pennsylvanian passing Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Bryn Mawr, PA . map filename ... Southern NS br Amtrak AMTRK map infobox rdt Amtrak Pennsylvanian map state collapsed The Pennsylvanian ... http www.timetables.org full.php?group 20091026&item 0057 ref During fiscal year 2011, the Pennsylvanian ... dollar 8,856,539 during FY2011, up 4.8 from FY2010. ref name FY2011 History The Pennsylvanian began ... of the Keystone Amtrak Keystone in 1972. At the time the Pennsylvanian was inaugurated, the Broadway ... 04 23&EntityId Ar02301 accessdate 2010 08 17 ref Between 1981 and 1983 the Pennsylvanian s equipment ... 1980s passenger rail groups urged Amtrak to extend the Pennsylvanian to Cleveland, Ohio . Proposals ... considered two routes for an extended Pennsylvanian one via Alliance, Ohio following the route ... Times ref File Amtrak Pennsylvanian TR43.jpg left thumb Amtrak s Pennsylvanian passing Rosemont ... 7, 1998, Amtrak extended the Pennsylvanian through to Chicago along the route of the Capitol ... full.php?group 19981025n&item 0028 ref Amtrak returned the Pennsylvanian to New York&mdash Pittsburgh ... the Pennsylvanian and Three Rivers , keeping the latter name with a western terminus in Chicago. Amtrak had sought 2.5 million in assistance from Pennsylvanian to keep both trains running. On March 8, 2005 Amtrak cut the train back to Pittsburgh&mdash New York and restored the Pennsylvanian name ... a through car connection with the Pennsylvanian Amtrak Pennsylvanian would result in the highest ... coaches between Chicago and New York via the Capitol Limited and Pennsylvanian beginning sometime when ... of the Pennsylvanian , including higher speeds and additional frequencies. ref cite web url http ... The Pennsylvanian runs a portion of the Three Rivers Amtrak Three Rivers route, which ran from New York to Chicago . East of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Harrisburg , the Pennsylvanian runs over Amtrak ... more details
hatnote USS Pennsylvanian redirects here. For other ships with a similar name, see USS Pennsylvania . Infobox ... 300px SS Pennsylvanian , seen here as USS Scranton ID 3511 in 1919 Ship caption SS Pennsylvanian ... 1912 New York City New York Ship name SS Pennsylvanian Ship owner American Hawaiian Steamship Company ... 1913 ref name Miramar cite Miramar id 2211297 shipname Pennsylvanian accessdate 15 April 2009 ref Ship ... Hide header Ship country U.S. Navy Ship flag USN flag 1919 Ship name USS Pennsylvanian ID 3511 ref ... York Ship name SS Pennsylvanian Ship owner American Hawaiian Steamship Company Ship fate expropriated ... abbr on machine gun s ref name DANFS Ship notes SS Pennsylvanian was a cargo ship built in 1913 ... States Navy and ship commissioning commissioned as USS Pennsylvanian ID 3511 in September 1918, but renamed two months later to USS Scranton . After her Navy service, her original name of Pennsylvanian was restored. Pennsylvanian was built by the Maryland Steel Company as one of eight sister ships ... of Tehuantepec and the Panama Canal after it opened. Pennsylvanian was one of the first two steamships ... USS Pennsylvanian and USS Scranton , the ship carried cargo and animals to France, and returned .... In mid July 1944, Pennsylvanian was scuttling scuttled as part of the breakwater structure breakwater ... 2 , SS Dakotan 2 , SS Montanan 2 , and Pennsylvanian . ref group Note Maryland Steel had built ... installments could be converted into longer term notes or mortgages. The final cost of Pennsylvanian ... to just under 716,000. ref name Cochran 358 Pennsylvanian Maryland Steel yard no. 127 ref name Colton ... Hawaiian in June. ref name Colton Pennsylvanian was GRT 6,547 first yes , ref name Cochran 365 and was convert ... Cochran 365 Pennsylvanian had a single steam engine powered by oil fired boiler s that drove a single ... name Cochran 357 speed Early career When Pennsylvanian began sailing for American Hawaiian, the company ... and Ginger, p. 355 56. ref Pennsylvanian sailed in this service on the west side of North America ... more details
Infobox Newspaper name The Daily Pennsylvanian image Image Newsfront.jpg 200px center type Daily newspaper owners The Daily Pennsylvanian, Inc. editor Dana Tom format Broadsheet foundation 1885 headquarters Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Philadelphia , Pennsylvania website http thedp.com thedp.com price Free The Daily Pennsylvanian The DP is the independent daily student newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania . It is published every weekday when the university is in session by a staff of more than 250 students. During the summer months, a smaller staff produces a weekly version called The Summer Pennsylvanian . The DP also publishes a weekly arts and entertainment magazine called 34th Street Magazine and a weekly newspaper mailed to parents and alumni called The Weekly Pennsylvanian . The DP operates three principal web sites thedp.com, 34st.com, and underthebutton.com as well as a variety of opinion, news, and sports blogs. History Founded in 1885, the newspaper has been published daily since 1894, except for a hiatus from May 1943 to November 1945 on account of World War II . The DP broke away from the university in 1962 to become an independent publication, incorporating in 1984 to solidify its financial and editorial independence from the university. ref http www.dailypennsylvanian.com aboutus About Us ref Today the newspaper s budget is funded primarily through the sale of advertising ... Week . Awards The Daily Pennsylvanian has won many of the most prestigious awards in college ... for Public Service References reflist External links http www.thedp.com Home Page of The Daily Pennsylvanian http www.34st.com Home Page of 34th Street Magazine affiliate of The Daily Pennsylvanian ... student newspaper navbox DEFAULTSORT Daily Pennsylvanian Category College newspapers Category Newspapers ... University of Pennsylvania Category Student newspapers published in Pennsylvania pt The Daily Pennsylvanian simple The Daily Pennsylvanian ... more details
File Earlyoilfield.jpg thumb A Pennsylvanian oil field in 1862. File Welcome to Titusville.jpg thumb Welcome sign to Titusville, PA unsourced date January 2012 The Pennsylvanian oil rush was a boom in petroleum production which occurred in northwestern Pennsylvania from 1859 to about 1870. It was the first oil boom in the United States . The oil rush began in Titusville, Pennsylvania , when Colonel Edwin L. Drake struck rock oil there. Numerous productive, highly profitable oil wells were drilled in the area, oil refineries were built there, Titusville expanded enormously, and an oil exchange was founded. After 1871, the oil industry was well established, and the rush to drill wells and control production was over. Pennsylvania oil production peak oil peaked in 1891, but Pennsylvania still has some oil industry. History The Titusville area had some natural petroleum seep s. In the late 1850s, the Seneca Oil Company formerly the Pennsylvania Rock Oil Company sent Drake to drill wells on a piece of leased land just south of Titusville near what is now Oil Creek State Park. Drake hired a salt well driller, William A. Smith, in the summer of 1859. They had many difficulties, but on August 27, they finally drilled a well that could be commercially successful. Soon other wells were drilled, by Seneca and other companies. Titusville grew from 250 residents to 10,000 almost overnight and in 1866 it incorporated as a city. Several ironworks were built to supply drilling tools. Eight oil refineries were built between 1862 and 1868. Other oil related businesses quickly exploded on the scene. The Oil Creek & Titusville Railroad was built to transport oil it opened in 1862, linking Titusville with the town of Corry, Pennsylvania Corry , 35 km north on the Erie Railroad . The oil was carried from the wells to the railroad in horse drawn wagons. In 1865 pipelines were laid from the oil fields directly to the rail line, ending horse drawn transport. That same year, the Union City, Pennsylvania ... more details
The German Pennsylvanian Association lang de Deutsch Pennsylvanischer Arbeitskreis is an organization founded 2003 in the Rheinhessen area of Ober Olm in Germany dedicated to cultural exchange and research involving the Pennsylvania German language Pennsylvania Dutch language and Pennsylvania Dutch people . The registered seat of the organization is in the Rhineland Palatinate capital of Mainz . Overview The goals of the organization are to promote cultural exchange between Pennsylvania n United States residents of German descent and their main region of origin in Southwest Germany , to encourage the creation of joint initiatives and sister city partnerships, and to promote the study of Pennsylvania Dutch history, language, and culture. Many of the members are linguistics linguists and historians or others from Germany or the United States who are interested in genealogy and the Pennsylvania Dutch culture. Executive committee The executive committee is composed of five members elected every three years. The first top chairperson was publishing editor Dr. Michael Werner who established the Pennsylvania German newspaper Hiwwe wie Driwwe and an archive for Pennsylvania Dutch literature in Ober Olm . He served as president between 2003 and 2010. Since April 2010, Frank Kessler Brussels is the top chairperson of the association. See also Pf lzisch language Pennsylvania German language Hiwwe wie Driwwe External links http www.dpak.de Deutsch Pennsylvanischer Arbeitskreis e. V. http www.mudderschproochfescht.wordpress.com En Friehyaahr fer die Mudderschprooch http www.hiwwe wie driwwe.de Hiwwe wie Driwwe The Pennsylvania German Newspaper Category Amish Category Pennsylvania German culture Category Pennsylvania German language pdc Deutsch Pennsylvanischer Arbeitskreis de Deutsch Pennsylvanischer Arbeitskreis pfl Deutsch Pennsylvanischer Arbeitskreis ... more details
George Gray 1725 1800 , owner and operator of Grays Ferry, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Grays Ferry , Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , USA, near Philadelphia, served as a member of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly and as its Speaker in 1783. While Speaker of the Assembly, Gray served, ex officio, as a trustee of the University of the State of Pennsylvania now the University of Pennsylvania . Gray married Martha Ibbetson or Ibison , November 25, 1752. He was the author of Treason Resolution , ordering paper currency, for which he was turned out of the Society of Friends Quaker Meeting . He was on the Committee of Safety American Revolution Committee of Safety when appointed chairman of the Board of War. Gray was a signatory to ratification of the first United States Constitution by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1787. ref http www.usconstitution.net rat pa.html Pennsylvania signatories to its ratification of the Constitution, December 12, 1787 ref References Reflist External links http www.archives.upenn.edu histy features 1700s people gray george.html University of Pennsylvania historical site PASpeakers1776 90 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Gray, George ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION American politician DATE OF BIRTH 1725 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1800 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Gray, George Category 1725 births Category 1800 deaths Category Members of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly Category University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania politician stub ... more details
John Potts c. 1710 6 Jun 1768 ref name rootsweb http freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com wittichen johnpotts.html ref was the founder of the towns of Pottstown, Pennsylvania Pottstown ref name pottstown http www.pottstown.org history.htm History of Pottstown from Pottstown Official Website accessed March 30, 2011 ref and Pottsville, Pennsylvania Pottsville , ref http www.city.pottsville.pa.us html history.htm History of Pottsville from City of Pottsville official website accessed March 30, 2011 ref Pennsylvania . He was also an ironmaster, merchant, and Religious Society of Friends English Quaker . John Potts, oldest son of Thomas ref name pottstown and Martha Keurlis Potts, was born about 1710, probably in the City of Philadelphia. He married Ruth Savage, daughter of Samuel and Ann Rutter Savage, on April 11, 1734. ref name rootsweb The marriage was accomplished after the manner of Friends, though not under their care or jurisdiction. ref Thomas Maxwell Potts, Historical collections relating to the Potts family in Great Britain and America , self published, 1901, Canonsburg, PA, ref He had one son, Samuel. ref name rootsweb John Potts, like his father, was an enterprising businessman, and for many years was the largest and most successful iron master in the American Colonies, operating mines, furnaces and forges, not only in Pennsylvania, but also in Virginia. He long filled the office of Justice of the Peace, and was also a Judge of the Court Common Pleas. In 1752, he purchased two tracts of land at the confluence of the Manatawny Creek and Schuylkill River , aggregating nearly one thousand acres. Here he laid out the town originally called Pottsgrove. Subsequently this name was applied to the Pottsgrove, Pennsylvania township occupying the northwestern division of Montgomery County, Pennsylvania Montgomery County , and the village took the name of Pottstown. Pottsgrove Manor In 1752, Potts built a Georgian architecture Georgian style home, Pottsgrove Mansio ... more details
Italic title Taxobox name Petalodus fossil range fossil range Pennsylvanian Permian regnum Animal ia phylum Chordate Chordata classis Chondrichthyes ordo Petalodontiformes familia Petalodontidae genus Petalodus genus authority Owen, 1840 Petalodus is an extinct genus of cartilaginous fish from the Permian . They were also in the Pennsylvanian . Sources portal Paleontology Fossils Smithsonian Handbooks by David Ward Page 198 Category Petalodontiformes Category Permian fish paleo fish stub ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Image StigmariaOhioPennsylvanian.jpg thumb Stigmaria , a fossil tree root. Upper Carboniferous of northeastern Ohio . Image Lycopsid joggins mcr1.JPG thumb In situ w lycopsid lycopsid with attached stigmarian roots. Joggins Formation w Pennsylvanian Pennsylvanian , Cumberland Basin, Nova Scotia. Image Stigmaria mcr1.jpg thumb Bedding plane view of a flattened Stigmaria preserved atop a shallow water carbonaceous limestone in the Joggins Formation w Pennsylvanian Pennsylvanian , Cumberland Basin, Nova Scotia. Stigmaria are a type of branching tree root fossil found in Carboniferous rocks. They were the roots of coal forest lycopsid trees such as Sigillaria and Lepidodendron . Each trunk tended to have four of those roots. Stigmaria is a form taxon botany form taxon , as the genus and species of the plant bearing the root is not identified. Category Carboniferous life Category Prehistoric plants Category Lycopodiophyta Lycophyte stub Paleobotany stub nl Stigmaria pl Stigmaria ... more details
Johann Conrad Weiser may refer to Conrad Weiser 1696 1760 , Pennsylvanian pioneer, interpreter and diplomat Johann Conrad Weiser, Sr. 1662 1746 , his father, German Palatine hndis Weiser, Johann Conrad ... more details
Wyck may refer to WYCK a Pennsylvanian AM broadcasting radio station Wyck, Hampshire a village in England Wyck House , a historic house in Philadelphia , Pennstlvania See also Wick disambiguation disambig de Wyck ... more details
taxobox fossil range fossil range Early Pennsylvanian regnum Animal ia phylum Mollusca classis Cephalopoda subclassis Coleoid a genus Jeletzkya species J. douglassae Jeletzkya is a fossil coleoid from the early Pennsylvanian Mazon Creek lagerst tten and represents the earliest known crown group squid . ref cite journal last Johnson first RG coauthors Richardson ES, Jr title Ten armed fossil cephalopod from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois. journal Science date 1968 02 02 volume 159 issue 814 pages 526 8 pmid 5635152 doi 10.1126 science.159.3814.526 jstor 1722879 ref Non mineralized anatomy is preserved and comprises ten hooked tentacles and a radula . References reflist Category Cephalopods cephalopod stub paleo stub ... more details
gallery Image Johnstown PA Station with Train.jpg Pennsylvanian Amtrak Pennsylvanian arriving at Johnstown Station. File Amtrak 42 Pennsylvanian Johnstown.jpg Close up of the Pennsylvanian gallery ... more details
dablink This article is about the former New York Pittsburgh train service. For the current New York Harrisburg service, see Keystone Service . ref improve date February 2012 Infobox rail service box width 30em name Keystone logo logo width image image width caption type Inter city rail status Discontinued locale Pennsylvania predecessor Duquesne first May 1, 1971 last June 10, 1972 successor Pennsylvanian train Pennsylvanian operator formeroperator Amtrak ridership start Pennsylvania Station New York City New York stops 16 end Union Station Pittsburgh Pittsburgh distance convert 439 mi km journeytime 9 hours 15 minutes frequency Daily trainnumber 42, 43 class access seating sleeping autorack catering observation entertainment baggage otherfacilities stock gauge railgauge ussg el speed owners Penn Central PC routenumber map infobox rdt Amtrak Keystone map state collapsed Amtrak s Keystone was a train service between New York Penn Station and Pittsburgh Penn Station . That route is now served by the Pennsylvanian Amtrak Pennsylvanian . Prior to Amtrak the route was known as the Duquesne , named after Fort Duquesne in Pittsburgh, and was operated by the Pennsylvania Railroad . Today Keystone trains offer frequent service between Penn Station and Harrisburg. History The Duquesne had a long history, finally becoming a daily New York Pittsburgh train October 25, 1959, numbered 16 eastbound and 25 westbound. With the start of Amtrak operations on May 1, 1971 the Duquesne was kept, and was renamed the Keystone and renumbered 42 westbound and 43 eastbound with the first brand new Amtrak timetable on November 14, 1971. Trains 42 and 43 are now the Pennsylvanian Amtrak Pennsylvanian . References http www.prrths.com Hagley PRR hagley intro.htm PRR Chronology External links http www.timetables.org full.php?group 19720116&item 0061 1972 timetable Amtrak routes US train stub Category Former Amtrak routes Category Railway lines opened in 1971 Category Railway lines closed in 1972 ... more details
Italic title Taxobox name Tesnusocaris goldichi fossil range fossil range Lower Pennsylvanian regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a subphylum Crustacean Crustacea classis Remipedia ordo Enantiopoda ordo authority Birshtein, 1960 familia Tesnusocarididae familia authority Brooks, 1955 genus Tesnusocaris genus authority Brooks, 1955 species T. goldichi binomial Tesnusocaris goldichi binomial authority Brooks, 1955 Tesnusocaris goldichi was a species of crustacean that lived in the Pennsylvanian period, the only representative of the extinct Order biology Order Enantiopoda . ref cite web url http www.marinespecies.org remipedia aphia.php?p browser title World Remipedia Database author Stefan Koenemann accessdate December 20, 2009 publisher Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee ref Its fossil is from the Lower Pennsylvanian Paleozoic , Carboniferous Tesnus formation , Texas . References reflist Category Remipedia Category Carboniferous crustaceans Category Monotypic arthropod genera Crustacean stub pt Tesnusocaris ... more details
italic title Taxobox name Longzhua fossil range fossil range Pennsylvanian regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a superordo Archaeorthoptera familia incertae sedis genus Longzhua genus authority Gu, B thoux & Ren, 2011 species L. loculata binomial Longzhua loculata binomial authority Gu, B thoux & Ren, 2011 Longzhua loculata is an extinct archaeorthoptera n stem group Orthoptera species which existed in what is now China during the Pennsylvanian period. ref cite journal author Jun Jie Gu, Olivier B thoux & Dong Ren year 2011 title Longzhua loculata n. gen. n. sp., one of the most completely documented Pennsylvanian Archaeorthoptera Insecta Ningxia, China journal Journal of Paleontology volume 85 issue 2 pages 303 314 doi 10.1666 10 085.1 url http 202.204.209.200 upload 20110322110354.pdf format Portable Document Format PDF ref References reflist Category Fossil taxa described in 2011 Category Carboniferous insects paleo arthropod stub Orthoptera stub ... more details
Automatic taxobox fossil range Geological range Pennsylvanian subdivision Bold species list P. konecniorum Schram, 1973 Priapulites is the earliest known crown group priapulid, and is closely related to the Priapulidae . ref name Budd2000 BuddJensen2000 ref References Reflist Animal stub Category Animals Category Monotypic animal genera nl Priapulites ... more details
Four U.S. Navy ships have been named USS Scranton USS Scranton ID 3511 was a transport that served in the U.S. Navy from 1918 to 1919. Both before and after this service, she served as the merchant steamer SS Pennsylvanian SS Pennsylvanian . Scranton PF 63 , Tacoma class frigate renamed USS Moberly PF 63 on 28 June 1944, five months after she was launched. USS Scranton CA 138 , an sclass Oregon City cruiser laid down on 27 December 1944 construction canceled on 12 August 1945 and unlaunched hull was scrapped on the slipway USS Scranton SSN 756 , a Los Angeles class submarine commissioned in 1991 presently in service As of 2006 lc on Shipindex DEFAULTSORT Scranton Category United States Navy ship names de USS Scranton ... more details
italic title Taxobox name Aphanites status fossil fossil range U Carboniferous U Pennsylvanian Penn regnum Animalia phylum Mollusca classis Cephalopoda subclassis Ammonoidea ordo Goniatitida superfamilia Gastriocerataceae familia Reticuloceratidae genus Aphanites genus authority Ruzhencev and Bogoslovskaya 1978 Aphanites is a Lower Pennsylvanian Ammonoidea ammonite belonging to the Goniatitida Goniatitid family Reticuloceratidae which are characterized by involute subdiscoidal shells covered by linear or biconvex growth lines that may be crossed by longitudinal lirae, producing a reticulate pattern. Sutures are simple, the ventral lobe double pronged. Related genera include Surenites and Reticuloceras . References Aphanites in Paleobiology Database, Surenitinae http paleodb.org cgi bin bridge.pl?action basicTaxonInfo&taxon no 148251 8 2 10 Goniat online, http www.goniat.org index.html , Reticuloceratidae 8 2 10 Category Goniatitida Ammonite stub pl Aphanites ... more details
italic title Taxobox name Uralopronorites fossil range U Carboniferous Carb Pennsylvanian Penn image regnum Animalia phylum Mollusca classis Cephalopoda subclassis Ammonoidea ordo Prolecanitida familia Pronoritidae genus Uralopronorites Uralopronorites is a very involute and smooth, medium sized, Prolecanitida prolecanitid with a distinct furrow along the venter and closed umbilicus. The adult suture has 22 lobes in all, 18 of which, nine on either side, are umbilical. Uralopronorites comes from the Upper Carboniferous Pennsylvanian equivalent of Kazakhstan. It is an ammonite. References http www.goniat.org showTax.html?TaxId tax00000000000000000000000005610 Uralopronorites GONIAT online 8 21 10 http paleodb.org cgi bin bridge.pl?action basicTaxonInfo&taxon no 13999 Paleobiology Database Uralopronorites 8 21 10 Category Ammonites Ammonite stub ... more details
Italic title Taxobox name Kellibrooksia fossil range fossil range Middle Pennsylvanian regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a subphylum Crustacean Crustacea classis Malacostraca ordo Hoplostraca familia Sairocarididae genus Kellibrooksia genus authority Frederick Schram Schram , 1973 Kellibrooksia is an extinct genus of crustacean in the order Hoplostraca from the Middle Pennsylvanian . ref cite journal author Frederick R. Schram year 1973 title On some phyllocarids and the origin of the Hoplocarida journal Fieldiana Geology volume 26 issue 2 pages 77 94 url http www.archive.org details onsomephyllocari262schr ref References reflist Category Crustaceans Category Carboniferous crustaceans Crustacean stub ... more details
Taxobox fossil range fossil range Pennsylvanian image Belotelson.JPG regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a subphylum Crustacean Crustacea classis Malacostraca ordo Belotelsonidea familia Belotelsonidae genus Belotelson genus authority Alpheus Spring Packard Packard , 1886 subdivision ranks Species subdivision Belotelson magister small Packard, 1886 small Belotelson traquairi small Peach, 1882 small Belotelson is an genus of crustacean , in the extinct order Belotelsonidea , containing at least two species. ref cite journal title Lobetelson mclaughlinae n. gen., n. sp., a new genus and species of belotelsonid malacostracan from the Pennsylvanian of the Mazon Creek area author Frederick Schram journal Zoosystema year 2006 volume 28 issue 2 pages 277 284 url http www.mnhn.fr museum front medias publication 8122 z06n2a1.pdf ref It was first named by Packard in 1886 from material foundin the Mazon Creek fossil beds Mazon Creek lagerst tte in Illinois . Its fossils have been found in Pennsylvanian age rocks. ref cite journal pages 229, 321 title Bulletins of American paleontology issue 44 publisher Paleontological Research Institution year 1962 ref External links cite web url http www.fossilmuseum.net Fossil Sites Mazon Creek Belotelson magister Belotelson.htm title Large Mazon Creek Fossil Crustacean Belotelson publisher Fossilmseum.net References reflist 2 Category Crustaceans Category Carboniferous crustaceans Crustacean stub it Belotelson ... more details
John Cadwalader is the name of John Cadwalader general 1742 1786 , known as General John Cadwalader , Pennsylvanian merchant, general in the Revolutionary War John Cadwalader jurist 1805 1879 , known as Judge John Cadwalader , served in the US Congress from Pennsylvania John Lambert Cadwalader 1836 1914 , lawyer from Pennsylvania, assistant U.S. secretary of state Hndis Cadwalader, John ja ... more details