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Presentation of the Harrell L. Strimple Award to Dean Pearson

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Kirk R. Johnson*
Affiliation:
Denver Museum of Nature and Science, 2001 Colorado Boulevard, Denver, CO 80205

Abstract

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Type
Society Records and Activities
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society

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References

Bibliography of Dean Pearson

Pearson, D. A. 1992. Microfaunal comparisons between the lower and upper portions of the Hell Creek Formation (Late Maastrichtian) in Southwestern North Dakota. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 46:84.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A. 1993. The Medicine Pole Hills Local Fauna: the first Diverse Chadronian (Latest Eocene) Age Fauna from North Dakota, p.2425. In The Marshall Lambert Symposium, North Dakota Geological Society.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A. 1993. White River Group Deposits of the Medicine Pole Hills, Bowman County, North Dakota, p. 4950. In The Marshall Lambert Symposium, North Dakota Geological Society.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A. 1993. Cretaceous Vertebrate studies in the Mud Buttes Area, Bowman County, North Dakota, p. 6668. In The Marshall Lambert Symposium, North Dakota Geological Society.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A. 1995. Hell Creek Formation (Cretaceous: Maastrichtian) Microsite Faunas: their potential as paleoenvironmental change and extinction indicators. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 49:61.Google Scholar
Oakland, L., and Pearson, D. A. 1995. A Tyrannosaurus rex from the Hell Creek Formation (Cretaceous: Maastrichtian). Bowman County, North Dakota and observations on its depositional setting. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 49:62.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A., and Hoganson, J. W. 1995. The Medicine Pole Hills Local Fauna: a Chadron Formation (Eocene) Vertebrate Assemblage from Bowman County, Southwestern North Dakota. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Program, p. 79.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A., and Hoganson, J. W. 1995. The Medicine Pole Hills Local Fauna: Chadron Formation (Eocene: Chadronian), Bowman County, North Dakota. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 49:65.Google Scholar
Schaefer, N. O., Schaefer, T., Bell, G. L., and Schumacher, B. A. 1995. A specimen of Plioplatecarpus from the Upper Cretaceous Pierre Shale, Cedar Creek Anticline, southwestern North Dakota. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 49:59. (While not an author on this contribution, Dean was responsible for training the two primary authors).Google Scholar
Hunter, J. P., and Pearson, D. A. 1996. First record of Lancian (Late Cretaceous) mammals from the Hell Creek Formation of southwestern North Dakota, USA. Cretaceous Research, 17:633643.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearson, D. A. 1997. Searching for the last dinosaur: a systematic survey in the latest Cretaceous rocks of southwestern North Dakota. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 51:213.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A. 1998. The Agamid Lizard Tinosaurus from the Medicine Pole Hills Locality (Eocene-Chadronian), southwestern North Dakota. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, 52:37.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A., 1999, Partnerships for productivity-Collaborative efforts among amateurs and academia. Proceedings of the North Dakota Academy of Science, Volume 53, p. 130133.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A., Schaefer, T., Johnson, K. R., and Nichols, D. J. 1999. Vertebrate biostratigraphy of the Hell Creek Formation in southwestern North Dakota. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Program, 31:72.Google Scholar
Pearson, D. A., Schaefer, T., Johnson, K. R., and Nichols, D. J. 2001. A gap in the record of all vertebrates at the K-T boundary in North Dakota supports abrupt dinosaur extinction. Geology, 29:3639.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar