This is a bibliography for the geology of Ham Hill, Somerset. It focuses on the Ham Hill Limestone Member (Hamstone) of the Bridport Sand Formation (Yeovil Sands) laid down in the Yeovillian Substage of the Toarcian Stage of the Lower Jurassic, but also includes other contextual references.

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  1. Saxton, C., 1575. Somersetensum Comitat (agri fertilitate Celebrem) hec ob oculus ponit Tabula. Christopher Saxton.


  2. Budgen, T., 1807. Ordnance Survey Drawings: South Petherton (OSD 52). Ordnance Survey Old Series Preparatory Drawing.


  3. Baker, B. and assistants, 1811. Ordnance Survey Old Series one inch survey of England and Wales Sheet 18 [Sherborne]. Surveyed 1805 to 1811. London: Lt. Col. Mudge, Tower.


  4. Smith, W., 1815. A delineation of the strata of England and Wales, with part of Scotland: exhibiting the collieries and mines, the marshes and fen lands originally overflowed by the sea, and the varieties of soil according to the variations in the substrata. Illustrated by the most descriptive names. London: John Cary.


  5. Smith, W., 1815. Map X including Explanation. In: A delineation of the strata of England and Wales, with part of Scotland: exhibiting the collieries and mines, the marshes and fen lands originally overflowed by the sea, and the varieties of soil according to the variations in the substrata. Illustrated by the most descriptive names. London: John Cary.


  6. Smith, W., 1815. Map XI. In: A delineation of the strata of England and Wales, with part of Scotland: exhibiting the collieries and mines, the marshes and fen lands originally overflowed by the sea, and the varieties of soil according to the variations in the substrata. Illustrated by the most descriptive names. London: John Cary.


  7. Smith, W., 1819. Geological view and section through Dorsetshire and Somersetshire to Taunton on the road through Yeovil to Wimborn Minster. John Cary.


  8. Walter, R., 1853. Hamdon Hill. Proceedings of the Somersetshire Archaeokogical and Natural History Society, 4 (2), 78–90.


  9. Lycette, J., 1857a. XVI.— On the sands intermediate the Inferior Oolite and Lias of the Cotteswold Hills, compared with a similar deposit upon the Coast of Yorkshire. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History; Zoology, Botany, and Geology, 30 (117), 170–177.


  10. Lycette, J., 1857b. The Cotteswold Hills Hand-book introductory to their Geology and Palaeontology. London: Piper Stephens and Spence.


  11. Moore, C., 1865-1866. On the Middle and Upper Lias of the South West of England. Proceedings of the Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, 13 (2), 119–244.


  12. Buckman, J., 1874. On the Cephalopoda-bed and the Oolite Sands of Dorset and part of Somerset. Proceedings of the Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, 20 (2), 140–164.


  13. Buckman, J., 1877. The Cephalopoda-beds of Gloucester, Dorset, and Somerset. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 33 (1-4), 1–9.


  14. Wright, T., 1878–1886. Monograph on the Lias Ammonites of the British Islands. Part First.—The Lias Formation. Pages 1–48; Plates I–VIII. Monographs of the Palaeontographical Society. Taylor & Francis.


  15. Buckman, J., 1879. On the so-called Midford Sands. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 35 (1-4), 736–743.


  16. Woodward, H. B., 1887. Note on the Ham Hill Stone. Proceedings of the Bath Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club, 6, 182–187.


  17. Buckman, S. S., 1889. On the Cotteswold, Midford, and Yeovil Sands, and the division between Lias and Oolite. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 45 (1-4), 440–474.


  18. Woodward, H. B., 1893. The Jurassic Rocks of Britain; Vol. III.: The Lias of England and Wales (Yorkshire Excepted). HMSO by Eyre and Spottiswoode.


  19. Woodward, H. B., 1894. The Jurassic Rocks of Britain; Vol. IV.: The Lower Oolite of England (Yorkshire Excepted). HMSO by Eyre and Spottiswoode.


  20. Woodward, H. B., 1895. The Jurassic Rocks of Britain; Vol. V.: The Middle and Upper Jurassic Rocks of England (Yorkshire Excepted). HMSO by Eyre and Spottiswoode.


  21. Buckman, S. S., 1907. A Monograph of the Ammonites of the “Inferior Oolite Series.” Monographs of the Palaeontographical Society, 61 (292), 1–cclxii.


  22. Buckman, S. S., 1910. Certain Jurassic (Lias-Oolite) Strata of South Dorset; and their Correlation. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 66 (1-4), 52–89.


  23. Richardson, L., Ussher, W. A. E., Whitaker, W., Winwood, H. H. and Stebbing, W. P. D., 1911. Excursion to Dunball, Burlescombe, Ilminster, Chard, Ham Hill, and Bradford Abbas: June 2nd to June 7th (Whitsuntide), 1911. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 22 (5), 246–263,IN2–IN5.


  24. Reader, T. W., 1911. Geological Photographs Long Excursions 1911 1912. Geologists’ Association Carreck Archive, 27–33.


  25. Richardson, L., 1918. The Inferior Ollite and contiguous deposites of the Crewkerne Ditict (Somerset). Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 74 (1-4), 145–173.


  26. Schneider, N., 1927. Étude stratigraphique et paléontologique de l’Aalénien de Gundershoffen (Bas-Rhin). Mémoires du Service de la carte géologique d’Alsace et de Lorraine, 3, 1–132.


  27. Arkell, W. J., 1933. The Jurassic System in Great Britain pp 1–339. Oxford: Clarendon Press.


  28. Arkell, W. J., 1933. The Jurassic System in Great Britain pp 340–681. Oxford: Clarendon Press.


  29. Kellaway, G. A. and Wilson, V., 1941. An outline of the geology of Yeovil, Sherborne and Sparkford Vale. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 52 (2), 131–IN6.


  30. Kellaway, G. A. and Wilson, V., 1941. Whitsun field meeting in the Yeovil district. May 27th to 30th, 1939. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 52 (2), 175–IN7.


  31. Wilson, V., Dines, H. G. and McLintock, W. F. P., 1946. Somerset 82 SW. Geological Survey of England and Wales County Series 1:10 560 maps - England.


  32. Maubeuge, P. L., 1946. Donnees stratigraphiques nouvelles sur l’ "Aalenien ferrugineux" (Yeovilien superieur) de Lorraine et en particulier dans le bassin de Nancy. Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France, S5-XVI (7-9), 477–484.


  33. Arkell, W. J., 1947. The geology of the country around Weymouth, Swanage, Corfe and Lulworth. London: HMSO.


  34. Arkell, W. J., 1950. A Classification of the Jurassic Ammonites. Journal of Paleontology, 24 (3), 354–364.


  35. Arkell, W. J., Kummel, B., Miller, A. K., Moore, R. C., Schindewolf, O. H., Wright, C. W., Furnish, W. M. and Sylvester-Bradley, P. C., 1957. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology: Mollusca 4, Cephalopoda, Ammonoidea. Pt. L.


  36. Wilson, V., Welch, F. B. A., Robbie, J. A. and Green, G. W., 1958. Geology of the country around Bridport and Yeovil. London: Geological Survey of Great Britain HMSO.


  37. Maubeuge, P. L., 1961. Ammonites caractéristiques de l’Aalénien Lorrain. Extrait du Bulletin Technique, 62 (1).


  38. Dean, W. T., Donovan, D. T. and Howarth, M. K., 1961. The Liassic Ammonite Zones and Subzones of the North-West European Province. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Geology, 4 (10), 435–505.


  39. Callomon, J. H., 1963. Sexual dimorphism in Jurassic ammonites. Trans. Leicester Lit. Phil. Soc., 57, 21–56.


  40. Howarth, M. K., 1964. Whitbian and Yeovillian Substage. Colloque du Jurassique, Luxembourg 1962, 189–191.


  41. Prudden, H. C., 1966. Excavations in the Yeovil Sands at Yew Tree Close, Yeovil. Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society, 81, 42–43.


  42. Davies, D. K., 1967. Origin of friable sandstone-calcareous sandstone rhythms in the Upper Lias of England. Journal of Sedimentary Research, 37 (4), 1179–1188.


  43. Davies, D. K., 1969. Shelf sedimentation: an example from the Jurassic of Britain. Journal of Sedimentary Research, 39 (4).


  44. Torrens, H. S., 1969. Field meeting in the Sherborne-Yeovil District. 22-23 April 1967. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 80 (3), 301–324.


  45. Sellwood, B. W. and Jenkyns, H. G., 1975. Basins and swells and the evolution of an epeiric sea: (Pliensbachian–Bajocian of Great Britain). Journal of the Geological Society, 131 (4), 373–388.


  46. Hallam, A. and Sellwood, B. W., 1976. Middle Mesozoic sedimentation in relation to tectonics in the British area. The journal of Geology, 84 (3), 301–321.


  47. Jenkyns, H. C. and Senior, J. R., 1977. A Liassic palaeofault from Dorset. Geological Magazine, 114 (1), 47–52.


  48. Melville, R. V., Freshney, E. C. and Chatwin, C. P., 1982. The Hampshire Basin and adjoining areas. (No Title).


  49. Prudden, H., 1983. Tear faulting in south-east Somerset (Abstract. Proceedings of the Ussher Society, 5 (4), 492.


  50. Teyssen, T. A. L., 1984. Sedimentology of the Minette oolitic ironstones of Luxembourg and Lorraine: a Jurassic subtidal sandwave complex. Sedimentology, 31 (2), 195–211.


  51. Hounslow, M. W., 1987. Magnetic fabric characteristics of bioturbated wave-produced grain orientation in the Bridport-Yeovil Sands (Lower Jurassic) of Southern England. Sedimentology, 34 (1), 117–128.


  52. Jenkyns, H. C., 1988. The early Toarcian (Jurassic) anoxic event; stratigraphic, sedimentary and geochemical evidence. American Journal of Science, 288 (2), 101–151.


  53. Kantorowicz, J. D., Love, C. F. and others, 1988. The origin and recognition of laterally continuous carbonate-cemented horizons in the Upper Lias Sands of southern England. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 5 (2), 108–133.


  54. D. Bryant, lan, Kantorowicz, J. D. and Love, C. F., 1988. The origin and recognition of laterally continuous carbonate-cemented horizons in the Upper Lias Sands of southern England. Marine and Petroleum Geology, 5 (2), 108–133.


  55. Simms, M. J., 1989. British Lower Jurassic crinoids. Monograph of the Palaeontographical Society, (581).


  56. House, M. R. and Kerr, W. A., 1989. Ammonoid Extinction Events [and Discussion]. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 325 (1228), 307–326.


  57. Damiani, G., 1990. Computer simulation of some ammonoid suture lines. Atti II Convengo Internationale 1987: Fossili, Evoluzione, Ambiente, edited by: Pallini, G., Cecca, F., Cresta, S., and Santantonio, M., 221–228.


  58. Chandler, R. B. and Sole, D. T. C., 1990. The Inferior Oolite at East Hill Quarry, Bradford Abbas, Dorset. Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society, 117, 101–108.


  59. Jenkyns, H. C. and Senior, J. R., 1991. Geological evidence for intra-Jurassic faulting in the Wessex Basin and its margins. Journal of the Geological Society, 148 (2), 245–260.


  60. Howarth, M. K., 1992. The Ammonite Family Hildoceratidae in the Lower Jurassic of Britain. Monograph of the British Palaeontographical Society.


  61. Hart, M. B., Prudden, H. and Edwards, S., 1992. New observations on the Ham Hill Stone (Lower Jurassic). Proceedings of the Ussher Society, 6, 73.


  62. Bjorkum, P. A. and Walderhaug, O., 1993. Isotopic composition of a calcite-cemented layer in the Lower Jurassic Bridport Sands, southern England: Implications for formation of laterally extensive calcite-cemented layers. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology; (United States), 63 (4), 678–682.


  63. Jefferson, D. P., 1993. Building stone: the geological dimension. Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology, 26 (4), 305–319.


  64. Prudden, H. C., 1995. Ham Hill: The rocks and quarries. Yeovil: South Somerset District Council.


  65. Hesselbo, S. and Jenkyns, H., 1995. A comparison of the Hettangian to Bajocian successions of Dorset and Yorkshire. Field Geology of the British Jurassic.


  66. Page, K. N., 1995. Biohorizons and zonules: intra-subzonal units in Jurassic ammonite stratigraphy. Palaeontology, 38 (4), 801–814.


  67. Rulleau, L., 1995. Les Graphoceratidae du Toarcien supérieur et de I’Aalénien de la région lyonnaise. France: Section Geologie-paleontologie du C.E. des ciments Lafarge,


  68. Evans, D. H., 1995. Site documentation/management brief Ham Hill SSSI. Natural England.


  69. Pickering, K. T., 1995. Are enigmatic erosional sandy wave-like bedforms in Jurassic Bridport Sands, Dorset, due to standing waves? Journal of the Geological Society, 152 (3), 481–485.


  70. Ellis, N. V. and Bowen, D. Q., 1996. An introduction to the geological conservation review. Joint Nature Conservation Committee.


  71. Haslett, S., 1996. The geology of Ham Hill. Somerset Magazine, 6, 26–27.


  72. Chandler, R. B., 1997. The graphoceratid ammonite succession in the Aalenian and lowest Bajocian (Middle Jurassic) at Horn Park, Dorset, UK. Proceedings of the Dorset natural History and archaeological Society, 118, 85–106.


  73. Hesselbo, S. and Jenkyns, H., 1998. British Lower Jurassic Sequence Stratigraphy. In: Mesozoic and Cenozoic Sequence Stratigraphy of Western European Basins. 561–581.


  74. Anon., 1999. A formational framework for the Lower Jurassic of England and Wales (onshore area). Keyworth, Nottingham: British Geological Survey Research Report.


  75. Hardy, P., 1999. The Geology of Somerset. Bradford-on-Avon: Ex Libris Press.


  76. Schulbert, C., 2001. Die Ammonitenfauna und Stratigraphie der Tongrube Mistelgau bei Bayreuth (Oberfranken).


  77. Rulleau, L., Elmi, S. and Thévenard, B., 2001. Géologie et paléontologie des dépôts ferrugineux du Toarcien et de l’Aalénien aux environs de Lyon. Travaux et Documents des Laboratoires de Géologie de Lyon, 154 (1), 3–153.


  78. Prudden, H., 2002. Building Stones in Somerset. Geoscience in south-west England (Proceedings of the Ussher Society), 10, 369.


  79. Prudden, H., 2002. Somerset Building Stone - A Guide. Proceedings of the Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society, 146, 27–36.


  80. Page, K. N., 2003. The Lower Jurassic of Europe: its subdivision and correlation. GEUS Bulletin, 1, 21–59.


  81. Prudden, H., 2004. Somerset Geology - A Good Rock Guide.


  82. Shand, P., Ander, E. L., Griffiths, K. J., Doherty, P. and Lawrence, A. R. P., 2004. Baseline Report Series 11: The Bridport Sands of Dorset and Somerset. Commissioned Report No.CR/04/166N.


  83. Simms, M. J., Chidlaw, N., Morton, N. and Page, K. N., 2004. British Lower Jurassic stratigraphy: an introduction. In: British Lower Jurassic Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series. Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee.


  84. Simms, M. J., Chidlaw, N., Morton, N. and Page, K. N., 2004. The Wessex Basin (Dorset and central Somerset). In: British Lower Jurassic Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series. Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee.


  85. Simms, M. J., Chidlaw, N., Morton, N. and Page, K. N., 2004. The Mendip and South Wales massifs. In: British Lower Jurassic Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series. Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee.


  86. Simms, M. J., Chidlaw, N., Morton, N. and Page, K. N., 2004. The Severn Basin. In: British Lower Jurassic Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series. Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee.


  87. Simms, M. J., Chidlaw, N., Morton, N. and Page, K. N., 2004. References, Glossary, Fossil Index & General Index. In: British Lower Jurassic Stratigraphy. Geological Conservation Review Series. Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee.


  88. Prudden, H., 2005. Strike-slip faulting in Somerset and adjacent areas. Geoscience in south-west England (Proceedings of the Ussher Society), 11, 158–161.


  89. Morris, J. E., Hampson, G. J. and Johnson, H. D., 2006. A sequence stratigraphic model for an intensely bioturbated shallow-marine sandstone: the Bridport Sand Formation, Wessex Basin, UK. Sedimentology, 53 (6), 1229–1263.


  90. Prudden, H., 2006. A Geological Guide to Ham Hill Country Park.


  91. Burt, C. E. and Prudden, H. C., 2007. A history of NS faulting in the Wessex Basin including new evidence from the clay vale. Geoscience in south-west England (Proceedings of the Ussher Society), 11 (4), 305–308.


  92. Prudden, H., 2007. Ham Hill Geology - geology in pictures.


  93. Lézin, C., Rey, J., Fauré, P., Cubaynes, R., Thierry, P., Christophe, D. and Deconinck, J.-F., 2007. Tectono-biosedimentary recordings at the Lias-Dogger transition: example of the Quercy carbonate platform (Aquitaine Basin, France). Bulletin de la Societe Geologique de France, 178, 275–291.


  94. Page, K. N., 2008. The evolution and geography of Jurassic ammonoids. Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, 119 (1), 35–57.


  95. Metodiev, L. S., 2008. The ammonite zones of the Toarcian in, Bulgaria - New evidence, subzonation and correlation with the standard zones and subzones in North-Western Europe. Proceedings of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 61 (1), 87–132.


  96. Page, K., 2009. High resolution ammonite stratigraphy of the Charmouth Mudstone formation (Lower Jurassic: Sinemurian-Lower Pliensbachian) in south-west England, UK. Volumina Jurassica, 7 (1), 19–29.


  97. Boomer, I., Lord, A. R., Page, K. N., Brown, P. R., Lowry, F. M. D. and Riding, J. B., 2009. The biostratigraphy of the Upper Pliensbachian-Toarcian (Lower Jurassic) sequence at Ilminster, Somerset. Journal of Micropalaeontology, 28 (1), 67–85.


  98. Chandler, R. and Callomon, J. H., 2009. The Inferior Oolite at Coombe Quarry, near Mapperton, Dorset, and a new Middle Jurassic ammonite faunal horizon, Aa-3b, Leioceras comptocostosum n biosp in the Scissum Zone of the Lower Aalenian. Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society, 130, 99–132.


  99. Dera, G., Neige, P., Dommergues, J.-L., Fara, E., Laffont, R. and Pellenard, P., 2010. High-resolution dynamics of Early Jurassic marine extinctions: the case of Pliensbachian–Toarcian ammonites (Cephalopoda). Journal of the Geological Society, 167, 21–33.


  100. Barton, C. M., Woods, M. A., Bristow, C. R., Newell, A. J., Westhead, R. K., Evans, D. J., Kirby, G. A. and Warrington, G., 2011. Geology of south Dorset and south-east Devon and its World Heritage Coast: Special Memoir for 1: 50 000 geological sheets 328 Dorchester, 341/342 West Fleet and Weymouth and 342/343 Swanage, and parts of sheets 326/340 Sidmouth, 327 Bridport, 329 Bournemouth and 339 Newton Abbot. British Geological Survey.


  101. Hendry, J., 2011. A Carbonate Cornucopia on the Jurassic Coast: Field Excursion. In: 14th Bathurst Meeting of Carbonate Sedimentology.


  102. Howarth, M. K., 2013. Part L, Revised, Volume 3B, Chapter 4: Psiloceratoidea, Eodoceratoidea, Hildoceratoidea. Treatise Online, 57, 1–139.


  103. Neige, P., Dera, G. and Dommergues, J.-L., 2013. Adaptive radiation in the fossil record: a case study among Jurassic ammonoids. Palaeontology, 56 (6), 1247–1261.


  104. Scrivener, R. C., Booth, S. J., Burt, C. E., Ellison, R. A., Hamblin, R. J. O., Hollick, L. M. and Royse, K. R., 2014. Geology of the Wellington district—a brief explanation of the geological map. Sheet explanation 1: 50 000 Sheet 311 Wellington (England and Wales). Keyworth, Nottingham: British Geological Survey.


  105. Prudden, H., 2014. The Geological Landscape of Somerset: The observations of Rack and Collinson. Proceedings of the Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society, 158, 104–113.


  106. Hampson, G. J., Morris, J. E. and Johnson, H. D., 2015. Synthesis of time-stratigraphic relationships and their impact on hydrocarbon reservoir distribution and performance, Bridport Sand Formation, Wessex Basin, UK. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 404 (1), 199–222.


  107. Di Cencio, A. and Doria, S., 2015. Probabilistic analysis of sutural lines developed in ammonites. An example: lower Jurassic Hammatocerataceae. In: Proceedings of the International Symposium on Imprecise Probability: Theories and Applications (isipta). Pescara, Italy, 338.


  108. Bristow, C. R. and Donovan, D. T., 2015. Geology of the Glastonbury-Shepton Mallet area. Geoscience in South-West England, 13, 377–391.


  109. Hampson, G. J. and Premwichein, K., 2017. Sedimentologic character of ancient muddy subaqueous-deltaic clinoforms: Down Cliff Clay Member, Bridport Sand Formation, Wessex Basin, UK. Journal of Sedimentary Research, 87 (9), 951–966.


  110. Page, K. N., 2017. From Oppel to Callomon (and beyond): building a high-resolution ammonite-based biochronology for the Jurassic System. Lethaia, 50 (3), 336–355.


  111. Di Cencio, A. and Doria, S., 2017. Probabilistic Analysis of Suture Lines Developed in Ammonites: The Jurassic Examples of Hildocerataceae and Hammatocerataceae. Mathematical Geosciences, 49, 737–750.


  112. Patruno, S. and Helland-Hansen, W., 2018. Clinoforms and clinoform systems: Review and dynamic classification scheme for shorelines, subaqueous deltas, shelf edges and continental margins. Earth-Science Reviews, 185, 202–233.


  113. Anon., 2019. Roman, medieval and later quarries, Ham Hill, Stoke sub Hamdon.


  114. Di Cencio A, W. R., Sadki D, 2020. Revision of upper Toarcian ammonites (Lytoceratidae, Graphoceratidae and Hammatoceratidae) from the Minette ironstones, southern Luxembourg. Ferrantia, 83, 5–103.


  115. Jaffré, R., 2020. Fiches d’aide à la détermination des ammonites jurassiques et crétacée. Sainte-Savine: Association Géologique Auboise.


  116. Boomer, I., Copestake, P., Page, K., Huxtable, J., Loy, T., Bown, P., Jones, T. D., O’Callaghan, M., Hawkes, S., Halfacree, D., Reay, H. and Caughtry, N., 2021. Biotic and stable-isotope characterization of the Toarcian Ocean Anoxic Event through a carbonate–clastic sequence from Somerset, UK. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 514 (1), 239–268.


  117. Arp, G., Gropengießer, S., Schulbert, C., Jung, D. and Reimer, A., 2021. Biostratigraphy and sequence stratigraphy of the Toarcian Ludwigskanal section (Franconian Alb, Southern Germany). Zitteliana, 95, 57–94.


  118. Pourmalek, A., Newell, A. J., Shariatipour, S. M. and Wood, A. M., 2022. The impact of heterogeneous mixed siliciclastic–carbonate systems on CO2 geological storage. Petroleum Geoscience, 28 (1), petgeo2020–086.


  119. Rulleau, L., Lacroix, P., Le Pichon, J.-P. and Ové, F., 2023. Les Graphoceratidae du Toarcien supérieur et de l’Aalénien inférieur et moyen. Lyon: Dédale Éditions.