North Texas Cretaceous References:



The Mollusca of the Buda limestone George Burbank Shattuck; Thomas Wayland Vaughan United States Geological Survey Bulletin No. 205, 1903.
Mollusks from the Pepper Shale Member of the Woodbine Formation, McLennan County, Texas Lloyd William Stephenson Washington, U.S. Govt. Print. Off.;1953


Gastropoda of the Kiamichi Shale of the Texas Panhandle * Merrill A. Stainbrook The University of Texas Publication No. 3945, p. 705-717
Palaeoecological significance of turritelline gastropod-dominated assemblages from the mid-Cretaceous (Albian-Cenomanian) of Texas and Oklahoma, USA Warren D. Allmon and Phoebe A. Cohen Cretaceous Research, In Press, Corrected Proof, Available online 22 October 2007
Texas Cretaceous Gastropods Rosemary E. Akers and Thomas J. Akers Texas Paleontology Series Publication No. 6, Houston Gem and Mineral Society, June 1997.
Texas Cretaceous Snails Part One Snails in General without the Woodbine & Navarro Groups Oswald, Guenther  
Texas Cretaceous Snails Part Two Snails of the Navarro and Woodbine Group Oswald, Guenther  


A brief study of some pelecypod genera of the Goodland formation Nicol, David 1939. TCU Master Thesis
Ammonites and Inoceramid Bivalves from Close to the Middle-Upper Albian Boundary around Fort Worth, Texas * W. J. Kennedy; A. S. Gale; J. M. Hancock; J. S. Crampton; W. A. Cobban Journal of Paleontology, Vol. 73, No. 6. (Nov., 1999), pp. 1101-1125
Comanchean and Cretaceous Pectinidae of Tx * Hedwig T. Kniker UT bulletin No. 1817; March 20, 1918
On a new Exogyra from the Del Rio clay and some observations on the evolution of Exogyra in the Texas Cretaceous Emil Böse Austin, Tex. : The University, <1919>
Texas Cretaceous Bivalves and Localities Irene D. Offeman Paleontology Section of the Houston Gem and Mineral Society, 1982
Texas Cretaceous Bivalves 2 (replaces Texas Cretaceous Bivalves and Localities) Rosemary E. Akers and Thomas J. Akers Texas Paleontology Series, Publication No. 7, Houston Gem and Mineral Society, Sept. 2002
Texas Cretaceous Bivalves Part One Clams and Scallops Oswald, Guenther  
Texas Cretaceous Bivalves Part Two Oysters & relatives Oswald, Guenther  
Texas Cretaceous Bivalves Part Three Rudists Oswald, Guenther  
Texas Cretaceous Bivalves Part Four Navarro Formation Oswald, Guenther  
The lower Cretaceous Gryphæas of the Texas region Robert Thomas Hill and Thomas Wayland Vaughan Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1898
Two new mollusks of the genera Ostrea and Exogyra from the Austin chalk, Texas Lloyd William Stephenson Proceedings of the United States National Museum. v. 76, art. 18; 1929


A new Upper Cretaceous Rudistid from the Kemp Clay of Texas Stephenson, L. W. 1938
A rudistid reef in the Edwards Limestone, near Belton, Texas Stangl, Frank J., Jr. 1927. TCU Master Thesis
Albian Caprinid Rudists from Texas Re-evaluated * Robert W. Scott Journal of Paleontology; May 2002; v. 76; no. 3; p. 408-423
New Rudistids from the Texas and Mexican Cretaceous * W. S. Adkins Contributions to Geology, UT Bulletin No. 3201


Acrothoracic Barnacles from the Texas Permian and Cretaceous * C. M. Schlaudt and Keith Young Journal of Paleontology, Vol. 34, No. 5, (Sep., 1960), pp. 903-907


Further New Rhynchonelloid Brachiopods from the Texas Cretaceous * D. V. Ager Journal of Paleontology, Vol. 38, No. 1, (Jan., 1964), pp. 109-112


Cartwright, Weldon Emerson, 1933, A Study of the Cretaceous Inocerami of Texas.