Postfiliale Als Antwort auf die Großes Universum ediacaran marine dolomite and marine archives Miniatur verschwenderisch Summen
Characteristics and primary mineralogy of fibrous marine dolomite cements in the end-Ediacaran Dengying Formation, South China: Implications for aragonite–dolomite seas - ScienceDirect
Formation, diagenesis and palaeoenvironmental significance of upper Ediacaran fibrous dolomite cements - Hu - 2020 - Sedimentology - Wiley Online Library
Massive formation of early diagenetic dolomite in the Ediacaran ocean: Constraints on the “dolomite problem” | PNAS
Formation, diagenesis and palaeoenvironmental significance of upper Ediacaran fibrous dolomite cements - Hu - 2020 - Sedimentology - Wiley Online Library
Massive formation of early diagenetic dolomite in the Ediacaran ocean: Constraints on the “dolomite problem” | PNAS
Extensive non-marine depositional setting evidenced by carbonate minerals in the Ediacaran clastic series of the western East European Craton - ScienceDirect
Reconstructions of the deep marine Ediacaran seafloors of Mistaken... | Download Scientific Diagram
Extensive non-marine depositional setting evidenced by carbonate minerals in the Ediacaran clastic series of the western East European Craton - ScienceDirect
The Dolomite Problem: A Matter of Time | ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
Upper Ediacaran fibrous dolomite versus Ordovician fibrous calcite cement: Origin and significance as a paleoenvironmental archive - ScienceDirect
Massive formation of early diagenetic dolomite in the Ediacaran ocean: Constraints on the “dolomite problem” | PNAS
Upper Ediacaran fibrous dolomite versus Ordovician fibrous calcite cement: Origin and significance as a paleoenvironmental archive - ScienceDirect
Formation, diagenesis and palaeoenvironmental significance of upper Ediacaran fibrous dolomite cements - Hu - 2020 - Sedimentology - Wiley Online Library
Cadmium isotopes in Late Ediacaran–Early Cambrian Yangtze Platform carbonates – Reconstruction of bioproductivity in ambient surface seawater - ScienceDirect