Kōichi Tachibana
Koichi Tachibana, Japanese palaeontologist.
Taxon names authored
(List may be incomplete)
Publications
edit(List may be incomplete)
1950
edit- Tachibana, K. 1950. Devonian plants first discovered in Japan. Proceedings of the Japan Academy 26(9): 54–60. PDF
1952
edit- Tachibana, K. 1952. On the Tobigamori Group of the Nagasaka district, Kitakami Mountainland. Journal of the Geological Society of Japan 58: 353–360 and 445–455.
1956
edit- Tachibana, K. 1956. New spiriferids from the lowest Carboniferous of the Nagasaka District, Kitakami Mountainland, northeast Japan. Nagasaki University, Faculty of Arts and Literature, Science Reports 5: 11–16. PDF
1963
edit- Tachibana, K. 1963. On the lowest Carboniferous Syringothyris of the Nagasaka district, northeast Japan. Bulletin of Faculty of Liberal Arts, Nagasaki University, Natural Science 3: 53–62. PDF Reference page.
1964
edit- Tachibana, K. 1964. Upper Devonian and Lower Carboniferous formations in the vicinity of Minamiiwairi, Higashiyamamachi, Iwate Prefecture, Pt. 1 (Study of the Devonian-Carboniferous boundary in the south-western part of the Kitakami Mountainland. 1.). Bulletin of Faculty of Liberal Arts, Nagasaki University, Natural Science 4: 31–43. PDF Reference page.
1969
edit- Tachibana, K. 1969. Stereoscopic photographs and descriptions of new syringothyroid brachiopods from the lowest Carboniferous of the southwestern Kitakami region, northeast Japan. Annual Report of the Faculty of Education, Iwate University 28: 19–27.
1978
edit- Kobayashi, T. & Tachibana, K. 1978. A New Carboniferous Trilobite from Nagasaka, Iwate Prefecture and its Bearings on Taxonomy and Biogeography. Proceedings of the Japan Academy Series B: Physical and Biological Sciences 54(6): 262–267. Reference page.
1981
edit- Tachibana, K. 1981. Silurian brachiopods from the Kitakami Mountainland, North Japan. Annual Report of the Faculty of Education, Iwate University 40: 29–54. PDF
- Tachibana, K. 1981. Some species of late Upper Devonian and lowest Carboniferous brachiopods from the Higashiyama district, Iwate Prefecture, north Japan. Annual Report of the Faculty of Education, Iwate University 41(1.3): 59–73.