Sankey, J.T. and S. Baszio, editors.  In Press (November, 2007) 

Vertebrate Microfossil Assemblages:  Their Role in Paleoecology and Paleobiogeography

Indiana University Press

Table of Contents

Part I.  Importance of microvertebrate sites, sampling, statistical methods, and taphonomy.

Chapter 1.  Information from microvertebrate localities - potentials and limits.  Sven Baszio.

Chapter 2. Vertebrate microsite sampling:  How much is enough?  Heather Jamniczky, Donald Brinkman, and Anthony Russell

Chapter 3.  Taphonomic issues relating to concentrations of pedogenic nodules and vertebrates in the Paleoecene and Miocene Gulf Coastal Plain:  Examples from Texas and Louisiana.  Judith Schiebout and Paul White

Part II.  Guild Analysis, Ecological and Faunal Analyses, Biodiversity, and Paleobiogeography

Chapter 4.  The structure of Late Cretaceous (late Campanian) non-marine aquatic communities:  A guild analyses of two vertebrate microfossil localities in Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta.  Donald Brinkman

Chapter 5.  Vertebrate paleoecology from microsites, upper Aguja Formation (Late Cretaceous), Big Bend National Park, Texas.  Julia Sankey

Chapter 6.  Terrestrial and aquatic vertebrate paleocommunities of the Mesaverde Formation (upper Cretaceous, Campanian) of the Wind River and Bighorn Basins, Wyoming.  David DeMar and Brent Breithaupt

Chapter 7.  Microwear patterns on teeth of sauropods and their paleobiological interpretation.  Tony Fiorillo

Chapter 8.  Diversity of Latest Cretaceous (late Maastrichtian) small theropods and birds:  teeth from the Lance and Hell Creek Formations.  Julia Sankey

Chapter 9.  Small theropod teeth from the Lance Formation of Wyoming.  Nick Longrich

Chapter 10.  The first serrated bird tooth.  Philip Currie and Clive Coy

Chapter 11.  First dinosaur eggshells from Texas:  Aguja Formation (late Campanian), Big Bend National Park.  Ed Welsh and Julia Sankey

Chapter 12.  Review of the Albanerpetontidae (Lissamphibia), with comments on the paleoecological preferences of European Tertiary albanerpetontids.  Jim Gardner and Madelaine Bohme

Chapter 13.  Frogs of the hell Creek Formation.  Jim Gardner