Robin Charles Whatley
Robin Charles Whatley (1936−2016), British micropalaeontologist, especially ostracodologist
Taxon names authored
(List may be incomplete)
Publications
edit(List may be incomplete)
1970
edit- Whatley, R.C. 1970. Scottish Callovian and Oxfordian Ostracoda. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Geology 19(6): 297–358, pls. 1–15. BHL MMTK (PDF) Reference page.
1974
edit- Whatley, R.C. & Cholich, T. 1974: A new Quaternary ostracod genus from Argentina. Palaeontology, 17 (3): 669–684, 2 plates.
1985
edit- Whatley, R.C., Ayress, M.A., Downing, S., Harlow, C. & Kesler, K. 1985. Aratrocypris, an enigmatic new cyprid ostracod from the Tertiary of DSDP sites in the SW Pacific. Journal of Micropalaeontolgy 4(2): 69–79. Reference page.
1987
edit- Whatley, R.C.; Chadwick, J.; Coxill, D.; Toy, N. 1987: New genera and species of cytheracean Ostracoda from the S.W. Atlantic. Journal of Micropalaeontology, 6 (2): 1–12. DOI: 10.1144/jm.6.2.1
1992
edit- Whatley, R.C.; Millson, K.J. 1992: Marwickcythereis, a new ostracod genus from the Tertiary of New Zealand. New Zealand natural sciences, 19: 41–44. PDF
1995
edit- Ayress, M.A., Whatley, R.C., Downing, S.E. & Millson, K.J. 1995. Cainozoic and Recent Deep Sea Cytherurid Ostracoda from the South Western Pacific and Eastern Indian Oceans, Part 1: Cytherurinae. Records of the Australian Museum 47(2): 203–233. PDF Reference page.
1999
edit- Ayress, M.A., Barrows, T., Passlow, V. & Whatley, R.C. 1999. Neogene to Recent species of Krithe (Crustacea: Ostracoda) from the Tasman Sea and off southern Australia with description of five new species. Records of the Australian Museum, 51(1): 1–22. DOI: 10.3853/j.0067-1975.51.1999.486 Reference page.
2009
edit- Titterton, R. & Whatley, R.C. 2009: Recent marine Ostracoda from the Solomon Islands. Part 7: Cytheroidea: Loxoconchidae. Revista Española de Micropaleontología, 41 (3): 295–314.
2013
edit- Warne, M.T. & Whatley, R.C. 2013: Description of Systenobythere gen. nov. (Ostracoda, Crustacea) from the late Miocene of southeastern Australia with comments on its problematical taxonomic and palaeoecological affinities. Alcheringa, 37 (1): 79–86. DOI: 10.1080/03115518.2012.702522