Steven Russell Manchester
Appearance
(Redirected from Steven R. Manchester)
Steven Russell Manchester (1956—), U.S. botanist and paleobotanist.
IPNI standard form: Manchester
Taxon names authored
(List may be incomplete)
Eponyms
(List may be incomplete)
Publications
[edit](List may be incomplete)
1992
[edit]- Manchester, S.R. 1992. Flowers, Fruit, and Pollen from Florissantia, an Extinct Malvalean Genus from the Eocene and Oligocene of Western North America. American Journal of Botany 79(9): 996–1008. DOI: 10.2307/2444909, JSTOR Reference page.
1994
[edit]- Manchester, S.R. 1994. Fruits and seeds of the Middle Eocene Nut Beds flora, Clarno Formation, Oregon. Palaeontographica Americana 58: 1–205. BHL PDF Reference page.
1996
[edit]- Manchester, S. R. & Chen, Z.; Palaeocarpinus aspinosa sp. nov. (Betulaceae) from the Paleocene of Wyoming, USA. International Journal of Plant Sciences 157(5): 644–655. 1996. doi:10.1086/297386.
- Manchester, S. R. & Guo, S.-X. 1996. Palaeocarpinus (Extinct Betulaceae) from Northwestern China: New Evidence for Paleocene Floristic Continuity between Asia, North America, and Europe. International Journal of Plant Sciences 157(2): 240–246.
1997
[edit]- Meyer, H.W. & Manchester, S.R. 1997. The Oligocene Bridge Creek flora of the John Day Formation, Oregon. University of California Publications in the Geological Sciences 141: 1–364. ISBN 978-0-520-09816-9. Reference page.
1999
[edit]- Manchester S.R. 1999. Biogeographical relationships of North American tertiary floras. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 86(2): 472–522. doi:10.2307/2666183. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271776404.
2000
[edit]- Akhmetiev, M. A. & Manchester, S. R. A new species of Palaeocarpinus (Betulaceae) from the Paleogene of Eastern Sikhote-Alin. Paleontological Journal 34: 467–474. 2000.
- Kvaček, Z.; Manchester, S.; Schorn, H. 2000. Cones, seeds, and foliage of Tetraclinis salicornioides (Cupressaceae) from the Oligocene and Miocene of western North America: a geographic extension of the European Tertiary species. International Journal of Plant Sciences 161(2): 331–344. doi:10.1086/314245. PMID 10777457.Reference page.
2003
[edit]- Pigg, K.B., Manchester, S.R. & Wehr, W.C. 2003. Corylus, Carpinus, and Palaeocarpinus (Betulaceae) from the Middle Eocene Klondike Mountain and Allenby Formations of Northwestern North America. International Journal of Plant Sciences 164(5): 807–822. DOI: 10.1086/376816 Reference page.
2004
[edit]- Manchester, S. R., Pigg, K. B. & Crane, P. R. 2004. Palaeocarpinus dakotensis sp.n. (Betulaceae: Coryloideae) and associated staminate catkins, pollen, and leaves from the Paleocene of North Dakota. International Journal of Plant Sciences 165(6): 1135–1148.
2007
[edit]- Manchester, S.R. & McIntosh, W.C. 2007. Late Eocene silicified fruits and seeds from the John Day Formation near Post, Oregon. PaleoBios 27(1): 7–17. ResearchGateReference page.
2013
[edit]- Wang Q.; Manchester S.R.; Gregor H.-J.; Shen S.; Li Z.-Y. 2013. Fruits of Koelreuteria (Sapindaceae) from the Cenozoic throughout the northern hemisphere: their ecological, evolutionary, and biogeographic implications. American Journal of Botany 100(2): 422–449. doi:10.3732/ajb.1200415. ISSN 1537-2197. PMID 23360930.
2021
[edit]- Correa-Narvaez, J.E. & Manchester, S. R. 2021. Distribution and Morphological Diversity of Palaeocarpinus (Betulaceae) from the Paleogene of the Northern Hemisphere.. The Botanical Review 88(2): 161–203. doi:10.1007/s12229-021-09258-y.
2022
[edit]- Manchester, S.R., Zhang, X., Hotton, C.L., Wing, S.L. & Crane, P.R. 2022. Two-seeded cones of probable gnetalean affinity from the Morrison Formation (Late Jurassic) of Utah and Colorado, USA. Acta Palaeobotanica 62(2): 77–92.
2023
[edit]- Pigg K.B.; Manchester S.R.; DeVore M.L. 2023. The early Eocene flora of Horsefly, British Columbia, Canada and its phytogeographic significance.. Fossil Imprint 79(2): 126–143. doi:10.37520/fi.2023.007.
2024
[edit]- Manchester, S.R. & Lott, T.A. 2024. Fossil leaves, fruits and seeds of the Late Eocene Teater Road flora near Post, Oregon, USA. PaleoBios 41(2): 1–71. doi:10.5070/P941264643.Reference page.
References
[edit]- Dr. Steven R. Manchester [includes links to CV etc.] Florida Museum of Natural History.