Tabulate Neptune Occurrences from a Site

NB To get the correct list of sites you may need to set fossil group and run search, then choose site.
Charts can be very large,and a large screen is useful, you can, however, reduce both depth and width of chart by selecting a limited set of samples.
Copying to excel: if you want to have a table in excel then simply copy and paste. This will work with most browsers, and most spreadsheet programs.

Site:
Fossil Group:
Names for columns:
Sort order
Age min: Age max:
Depth min: Depth max:
Core min: Core max:
Species min: Species max:
highlight duplicate rows?:
off
nReference source date set rows
0Edwards, A.R. and Perch-Nielsen, K 1974. Calcareous Nannofossils from the Southern Southwest Pacific, Deep Sea Drilling Project, Leg 29. In Kennett, J. P., Houtz, R. E., et al., Initial Reports of the Deep Sea Drilling Project, Volume 29. Washington (U.S. Government Printing Office) 469-539.prior to 2010647108
If more than one reference is listed then the set column can be used to identify which data rows come from which reference.





Age(Ma)mbsf
0 Cruciplacolithus neohelis (q)
1 Discoaster sp.
2 Coccolithus pelagicus s.ampl.
3 Coronocyclas prionion
4 Sphenolithus moriformis
5 Pontosphaera sp.
6 Coccolithus abisectus (q)
7 Scyphosphaera sp.
8 Coccolithus eopelagicus
9 Cyclicargolithus neogammation
10 Helicopontosphaera kamptneri
11 Cyclococcolithina leptopora
12 Reticulofenestra pseudoumbilica
13 Sphenolithus neoabies
14 Cyclococcolithina macintyrei
15 Thoracosphaera sp.
sample
set
10.0478.10TCFRRFRFACC9_3_110cm647
10.379.60RCRRRAFF9_4_110cm647
10.5681.10TTFRRRTRFACFT9_5_110cm647
10.8282.60CRFRTTRRACF9_6_110cm647
10.9883.50TCRRTRRRAFFT9_9_0cm647
11.6187.13ARCAR10_3_63cm647
11.6987.60TAFCFCCFT10_3_110cm647
11.9589.10RCRRRFRCCFFT10_4_110cm647


Colour coding: this is based on comparing the standard range of the taxon (from the mikrotax database) with the age of the sample (from the Neptune database).
Pink shading - the sample age is too young for the taxon; any occurrences are shown in red - and may be due to reworking.
Green shading - the sample age is correct for the taxon to occur
Grey shading - the sample is too old for the taxon; any occurrences are shown in magenta - these may be due to misidentifications, changing species concepts, downhole contamination or White/no shading - non-standard taxon and so there is no predicted age-range.