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Palynological Associations
Alexa (Alexa Internet, Inc.,
an Amazon.com Company).
Alexa is a Web Information Company, perhaps best known for the Alexa Rank,
the website ranking system which tracks over 30 million websites worldwide.
See especially:
The
top ranked sites in category "Science".
Go to:
!
Palynology.
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG):
Gateways.
Helpful links to sites about career, cool spots, data, societies, international and related organizations, education, government and
other resources. Go to:
Education.
These expired links are now available through the Internet Archive´s
Wayback Machine.
American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists, (AASP): AASP was established to promote the science of palynology.
AASP Data Committee, American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists (this web site is made available by the Department of Geology at the University of Toronto): Palydisks. Downloadable collection of palynology files. Includes bibliographies, pollen diagrams, statistics, and various related programs. The Palydisks are in the "public domain" available for exchange, with explicit acknowledgement of the original author.
Associazione Italiana Per lo Studio del Quaternario (AIQUA).
Asociación Latinoamericana de Paleobotánica y Palinología (ALPP)
Asociación
de Palinólogos de Lengua Española (APLE).
Go to:
Links
of Interest.
Pollen
Databases.
Canadian Association of Palynologists (CAP).
Worth checking out:
CAP Library and Resources.
Commission Internationale de Microflore du Paléozoique (C.I.M.P.).
C.I.M.P. is an international federation of palynologists
interested in Palaeozoic palynology. The commission aims to
advance knowledge in palynology and related subjects by the
promotion of international co-operation and meetings between
scientists of all regions and countries. See also
here.
Worth checking out:
Links.
Commision Internationale de Microflore Paléozoique (C.I.M.P.), Subcommission on Spores and Pollen.
Commision Internationale de Microflore Paléozoique (C.I.M.P.), Acritarch Subcomission.
! Owen Kent Davis, Department of Geosciences University of Arizona, Tucson: Links to Palynology and Palynologists, Palynologist´s Pages. See also: Palynology, Links to Academic Sites, Palynology Educators. Web pages and email addresses for ninety-two palynologists at academic institutions in North America.
Group of European Charophyte Specialists (GEC).
The Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP): Micropaleontological Reference Centers. MRCs provide scientists with an opportunity to examine microfossils of various geologic ages, and from a globally distributed set of locations.
The International
Federation of Palynological Societies (IFPS).
IFPS is a federation of regional, national, linguistic, and specialist palynological organizations
of the world.
Go to:
Future Events.
See also:
Palynos.
Newsletter of the International Federation of Palynological Societies.
International Humic Substances Society:
The motto of IHSS is "To Advance the Knowledge, Research and Application of
Humic Substances".
For scientists with interest
in humic substances in the coal, soil, and water sciences, and to provide
opportunities for them to exchange ideas, skills, and viewpoints.
See also
here
(Wikipedia).
The International Nannoplankton Association (hosted by The Natural History Museum in London): INA is a semi-formal association of scientists worldwide who have an interest in living or fossil nannoplankton - including coccolithophores, nannoliths, and other nannofossils such as silicoflagellates and calcisphere.
International
Research Group on Charophytes (IRGC).
The aims of IRGC are to promote and coordinate international cooperation in charophyte research, including living and fossil
material of all geological periods, and to encourage the integration and synthesis of all aspects of both botanical
and paleobotanical study of charophytes.
Visit the
IRGC photoalbum.
The Low Latitudes Dinoflagellates Working Group. (part of the American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists).
!
The Micropalaeontological Society (TMS).
TMS exists to advance the education of the public in the study of Micropalaeontology and is
operated exclusively for scientific and educational purposes and not for profit. See especially:
Palynology.
NAMS, the North American Micropaleontology Section of the Society for Sedimentary Geology (SEPM). The purpose of the Section is to promote all aspects of micropaleontology through application, research and education dealing with morphology, biostratigraphy, ecology/paleoecology, and geologic history of all groups of microfossils occurring in the stratigraphic record.
The Palynological Society of Japan.
Save NHM Micropalaeontology. This website is created as a focus for protest against the proposed closure of the Natural History Museum´s Micropalaeontology Research Group. Sign the petition.
!
Society for the Promotion of Palynological Research in Austria,
Faculty Centre of Biodiversity
(the former Institute of Botany), Vienna:
PalDat - Palynological Database.
An Online Publication on fossil and recent Pollen and Spores.
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