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1. FISH OTOLITHS FROM THE UPPER OLIGOCENE AND LOWER MIOCENE OF THE MONFERRATO AND TURIN HILL, NORTHERN ITALY.

2. DASYCLADALES (GREEN ALGAE) AND SOME BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA FROM THE UPPER CRETACEOUS ILAM FORMATION (LATE CONIACIAN-SATONIAN), SW IRAN (ONSHORE AND OFFSHORE).

3. A review of the Mesozoic–Cenozoic acritarch genus Cyclopsiella Drugg & Loeblich Jr. 1967 emend. nov.

4. The biostratigraphy and palaeobiogeography of Cambrian and Ordovician acritarchs and chitinozoa from the Simeh-Kuh, NW Damghan City, the Alborz Mountains, northern Iran.

5. Comment on “Singh R, Vadlamani R, Bajpai S, Maurya AS (2024) Strontium Isotope Stratigraphy of Marine Oligocene–Miocene Sedimentary Successions of Kutch Basin, Western India. Geological Journal, 1–20. DOI: 10.1002/gj.4961”.

6. A latest Eocene depocenter in between uplifted masses (SW Netherlands and NW Belgium).

7. Early Pliocene Spalacinae from the locality of Afşar, western Turkey.

8. First U-Pb (CA-ID-TIMS) Dating of the Uppermost Permian Coal Interval in the Minusinsk Coal Basin (Siberia, Russia) Using Zircon Grains from Volcanic Ashfalls.

9. Improvement of the Neogene Zonal Diatom Scale of Primorye (Russia).

10. Controls on coastal sediment stratigraphy and morphodynamics in northwest Ireland.

11. Miocene Petit-Spot Basanitic Volcanoes on Cretaceous Alba Guyot (Magellan Seamount Trail, Pacific Ocean).

12. Biostratigraphic significance of a new record of <italic>Protuberum cabralense</italic>, a bizarre traversodontid cynodont from the Middle‑Late Triassic of Southern Brazil.

13. Integration of new zircon U–Pb ages with biostratigraphy to establish a high-precision age model of the Miocene Nakayama Formation on Sado Island in Central Japan.

14. Calcareous nannofossil biostratigraphy, bioevents, and palaeoecological interpretation of the lower-middle Miocene outcrops in west central Sinai (Egypt).

15. Conodont biostratigraphy and biofacies of marine intervals in the Pennsylvanian middleMinnelusa Formation in the Black Hills region, South Dakota, U.S.A.

16. Classifying Cockroaches According to Forewings: Pitfalls and Implications for Fossil Systematics.

17. Dipodidae (Rodentia, Mammalia) from the Miocene of Damiao, Nei Mongol, China.

18. Biostratigraphical and paleoenvironmental studies of some Miocene‒Pliocene successions in Northwestern Nile Delta, Egypt.

19. Foraminiferal biostratigraphy across the Eocene–Oligocene transition, in the Zagros Basin, Southern Iran.

20. Understanding sedimentary systems and processes of the Hikurangi subduction margin; from Trench to Back-Arc. Volume 2.

21. Litho- and biostratigraphy of a late Oligocene–Early Miocene succession in the Weber area, southern Hawke's Bay, and implications for early Hikurangi subduction-margin evolution.

22. Biostratigraphically constrained chronologies for Quaternary sequences from the Hikurangi margin of north-eastern Zealandia.

23. A detailed biostratigraphic framework for 0–1.2 Ma Quaternary sediments of north-eastern Zealandia.

24. New ammonoid records and the definition of the base of the German Hemberg-Stufe (Famennian III, Upper Devonian).

25. Lithofacies variability and facies analysis of a Givetian reef in the southwestern Lahn Syncline (Rhenish Massif, Germany).

26. Middle Devonian actinopterygians from Lithuania and Belarus.

27. New Ludlovian, upper Silurian, graptolite faunas from the Los Espejos Formation, Central Precordillera, San Juan Province, Argentina: correlations and biostratigraphic remarks

28. Calcareous nannofossil communities during Late Triassic Mass Extinction and Early Jurassic recovery in the NW Tethys: evidence from Slovakia, Western Carpathians

29. Chukhonastovka – the reference section of the Turonian-Lower Santonian from the Volga-Ilovlya interfluve (the Volga right bank area near Volgograd). Paper 1. The section descriptions

30. Site U1592.

31. Expedition 398 summary.

32. Developments in the Cretaceous Stratigraphy of Crimea. Part 2. Upper Cretaceous and Conclusions.

33. Upper Jurassic Volgian Stage and Lower Cretaceous Ryazanian Stage of the Panboreal Biogeographic Superrealm.

34. Middle Ordovician of the Gorny Altai: Litho-Biostratigraphy and Justification of Boundaries of Regional Units.

35. First multi-proxy chronostratigraphy of the lower Cambrian Byrd Group, Transantarctic Mountains and correlation within East Gondwana.

36. Marine microfossils: Tiny archives of ocean changes through deep time

37. Classifying Cockroaches According to Forewings: Pitfalls and Implications for Fossil Systematics

38. Biostratigraphy and palaeoecology of Ostracodes of the Members c1 to c4 and e of the Qom Formation in the South of Shurab, Southeast of Qom

39. Chronostratigraphy and tectono‐sedimentary history of the Eastern South Pyrenean foreland basin (Ripoll Syncline, North‐East Spain)

40. An appraisal of taxonomic issues in Lower to mid-Cretaceous mesorbitolinids (larger benthic foraminifera).

41. Diversity, biostratigraphy and paleobiogeographic distribution of Bagginoides, two new species of benthic foraminifera from Upper Cretaceous and Paleocene deposits of Western Siberia.

42. Middle Eocene to earliest Oligocene dinoflagellate cysts from southern Armenia: biostratigraphy and palaeoecology.

43. Updating the fauna and age of the Neogene-Quaternary large mammal sites of Greece.

44. Biostratigraphic, palaeoenvironmental and palaeobiogeographic implications of bryozoan fauna from the Upper Devonian sequences of Armenia.

45. New Data on the Nannofossil and Planktonic Foraminiferal Composition in the Lower Miocene Alkun Formation, Ciscaucasia.

46. Upper Pliocene–Lower Pleistocene Upper Molasse Belorechensk Formation of Western Ciscaucasia in Context of Regional Neotectonics and Paleogeography.

47. Ammonite-calibrated nautiloid occurrences from the Callovian-Oxfordian (Middle-Upper Jurassic) deposits of southern Poland.

48. Note on Lower Triassic Gondolelloid Conodont Rediversifications with Emphasis on the Spathian Recovery.

49. Middle Miocene (Langhian and Lower Serravallian/Badenian) Scallops (Bivalvia: Pectinidae) from the Precious Collections of the Croatian Natural History Museum.

50. First documentation of Late Paleozoic conodonts from Argentina: Biostratigraphic and paleoclimatic constraints for the Late Paleozoic Ice Age in SW Gondwana.

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