Publications arising from visiting researchers and loans

Biology

 

World Cultures (Ethnology)



Biology publications

BABCOCK, L. E.

Babcock, L.E. and Feldmann, R.M. 1986. Devonian and Mississippian Conulariids of North America. Part. B. Paraconularia, Rediculaconularia, a new genus and organisms rejected from Conluariida. Annals of Carnegie Museum, v. 55, Art. 16.

BOUCOT, A.

Boucot, A.J., C.E. Brett, W.A. Oliver, and R.B. Blodgett. 1986. Devonian Faunas of the Sainte-Helene Island breccia, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 23: 2047-2056.

CHITALEY, S.

Chitaley, S. 1992. On the occurrence of Prototaxites in the Cleveland Black Shale of Ohio, USA. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 72: 257-271.

EDGECOMBE, G. D.

Edgecombe, G.D. 1993. Silurian Acastacean Trilobites of the Americas. Journal of Paleontology 67(4): 535-548.

HARINGTON, C. R.

Harington, C.R. and Occhietti, S. 1988. Inventaire systématique et paléoécologie des Mammifères marins de la Mer de Champlain (Fin du Wisconsinien) et de ses voies c'accès. Géographiephysique et Quaternaire 42(1): 45-64.

HEWITT, R. A.

Hewitt, R.A. 1986. Paleontological work of Lt. Col. C.C. Grant on the Silurian rocks of the Niagara Escarpment at Hamilton, Ontario. Geoscience Canada 13(4): 270-276.

Hewitt, R.A. 1984. Growth analysis of Silurian Orthoconic Nautiloids. Paleontology 27(4): 671-677.

HILLIS, D. M.

Hillis, D.M., Ammerman, L.K., Dixon, M.T. and de Sa, R.O. 1993. Ribosomal DNA and the phylogeny of frogs. Herpetological Monographs 7: 118-131.



KLEMBARA, J.

Klembara, J. 1985. A new embolomerous amphibian (Anthracosauria) from the Upper Carboniferous of Florence, Nova Scotia. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 5(4): 293-302.

LARSON, A. L.

LARSON, A.L. and Dimmick, W.W. 1993. Phylogenetic relationships of the salamander families: an analysis of congruence among morphological and molecular characters. Herpetological Monographs 7: 77-93.

LYONS, P. C.

Lyons, P.C. and Darrah, W.C. 1987. Paleoenvironmental and paleoecological significance of Walchian conifers in Westphalian (L. Carboniferous) horizons of North America. Monograph of paper presented at the 11th Int. Congress of Carboniferous Stratigraphy and Geology (Beijing, China), pp. 1-13.

MEHL, D.

Mehl, D., Rigby, J.K. and Holmes, S.R. 1993. Hexactinellid sponges from the Silurian- Devonian Roberts Mountains Formation in Nevada and hypotheses of heactine- stauractine origin. Brigham Young University Geological Studies 39: 101-124.

RIVA, J. F.

Riva, J.F. 1994. Yutagraptus mantuanus Riva in Rickards 1994, a pendent xiphograptid from the Lower Ordovician of Utah, U.S.A. In Chen, Xu, B.-D. Erdtmann and Ni Yu- nan (eds.), Graptolite Research Today, pp. 1-13.

WARNER, B. G.

Warner, B.G. 1984. The identity of Acer pleistocenicum Pen. and A. torontoniensis from the Don Formation (Sangamonian Interglaciation) at Toronto, Ontario. Ont. Field Biol. 38: 11-16.

Warner, B.G. 1986. Early work in Quaternary botany in Canada. Geoscience Canada 13(1): 39-44.

YOCHELSON, E. L.

Yochelson, E.L. and Fedonkin, M.A. 1993. Paleobiology of Climactichnites, an Enigmatic Late Cambrian Fossil. Smithsonian Cont. to Paleobiol. 74: 1-74.

ZODROW, E. L.

Zodrow, E.L. 1986. Succession of paleobotanical events: evidence for Mid-Westphalian D floral changes, Morien Group (late Pennsylvanian, Nova Scotia). Review of Paleobotany and Palynology 47: 293-326.

Zodrow, E.L. 1985. Odontopteris Brongniart in the Upper Carboniferous of Canada. Paleontographica, Abt. B, Bd. 196: 9-110.



World Cultures (Ethnology) publications

DAGAN, E.

Dagan, E. 1988. When Art Shares Nature's Gift. Montreal: Galerie Amrad, pp. 236.

EL MAHDY, C.

El Mahdy, C. 1989. Mummies, Myth and Magic in Ancient Egypt. London: Thames and Hudson, pp. 192. (Redpath material included in a list of international collections.)

FRAME, G.

Frame, G., Frayne, D., and McEwan, G. 1989. Cuneiform texts in the collections of McGill University, Montreal. Annual Review of the Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Project 7: 54.

Frame, G. 1987. A Babylonian omen text in the Redpath Museum. Annual Review of the Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia Project 5: 7-10.

HORNE, P.

Horne, P. and Ireland, R. 1991. Moss and a Guanche mummy: an unusual utilization. The Bryologist 94(4): 407-408.

Horne, P and Jarzen, D. 1992. Dragon's blood and mummies: modern science unravels ancient mysteries. / Sang de dragon et momies: d'anciens mystères sous l'éclairage de la science moderne. BIOME 12(2): 2.

Horne, P., Lawson, B., and A. Aufderheide. 1992. Examination of the Guanche mummy RED-1. Proceedings of the First World Congress on Mummy Studies, Tenerife, (2 vols.), v. I, pp. 135-40.

LABELLE, M.-L

Labelle, M.-L. 2005. Beads of Life: Eastern and Southern African Beadwork from Canadian Collections, Mercury Series, Cultural Studies Paper 78, 208 pages.

MCEWAN, G. J. P.

MCEWAN, G.J.P. 1986. A Seleucid tablet in the Redpath Museum. Annual Review of the Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia, v. 4, pp. 35-36.

MARSHALL, C. W.

Marshall, C.W. 1998. Book Review of T.B.L. Webster, Monuments Illustrating New Comedy. In Echoes du Monde Classique / Classical Views, vol. XLII, n.s. 17: 178-184.

PELLIZARI, M. A.

Pelizzari, M. A., ed. 2003. Traces of India: Photography, Architecture, and the Politics of Representation, 1850-1900, Canadian Centre for Architecture and Yale Center for British Art, p. 219.

PERROIS, L.

Perrois, L. Forthcoming 2009. Beaux-arts d’Afrique à Montréal, Tribal Arts.

PRESCOTT, Y.

Prescott, Y. 2008. L’évolution des collections africaines à Montréal: de l’anthropologie au patrimoine culturel mondial. Vies des Arts, n. 212: p. 80.

SCHMULL, M.

Schmull, M. and Brown, D. 2009. Pseudevernia furfuracea, the mummy's lichen at the Farlow Herbarium. Opuscula Philolichenum, 6: pp. 45–50.

THOMAS, W.

Thomas, W. 1989. Witnesses to Tradition: African art from the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and the Redpath Museum. Montreal: Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, p. 72.

 

Land Acknowledgement

McGill University is on land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. We acknowledge and thank the diverse Indigenous peoples whose presence marks this territory on which peoples of the world now gather.

The Redpath Museum's director EDI statement.

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