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System | Series | Stage | Age (Ma) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Paleogene | Paleocene | Danian | younger | |
Cretaceous | Upper | Maastrichtian | 65.5–70.6 | |
Campanian | 70.6–83.5 | |||
Santonian | 83.5–85.8 | |||
Coniacian | 85.8–89.3 | |||
Turonian | 89.3–93.5 | |||
Cenomanian | 93.5–99.6 | |||
Lower | Albian | 99.6–112.0 | ||
Aptian | 112.0–125.0 | |||
Barremian | 125.0–130.0 | |||
Hauterivian | 130.0–136.4 | |||
Valanginian | 136.4–140.2 | |||
Berriasian | 140.2–145.5 | |||
Jurassic | Upper | Tithonian | older | |
Subdivision of the Cretaceous system according to the IUGS, as of July 2009. |
The Early Cretaceous (geochronological name) or the Lower Cretaceous (chronostratigraphic name), is the earlier or lower of the two major divisions of the Cretaceous. It is usually considered to stretch from 146 Ma to 100 Ma.
During this time many new types of dinosaurs appeared or came into prominence, including Psittacosaurus, spinosaurids and coelurosaurs, while other survivors from the Late Jurassic continued.
In the seas, the ichthyosaurs declined and eventually died out at the start of the Late Cretaceous. Angiosperms[1] and Eutherians[2] appear for the first time.
Cretaceous Period | |
---|---|
Lower/Early Cretaceous | Upper/Late Cretaceous |
Berriasian | Valanginian | Hauterivian Barremian | Aptian | Albian |
Cenomanian | Turonian | Coniacian Santonian | Campanian | Maastrichtian |
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The Early Beatles is the Beatles' sixth release on Capitol Records, and their eighth album for the American market. All of the tracks on this album had previously been issued on the early 1964 Vee-Jay release Introducing... The Beatles. The front cover photo for this album features the same back cover photo for the British LP Beatles for Sale.
Vee-Jay had gained American distribution rights to the tracks before the group became popular in America (because Capitol, the US subsidiary of EMI which owns the Beatles' record label Parlophone, had declined to release the group's records in America), and their releases had initially failed to chart. But after the group became famous, Vee-Jay, still holding the rights to the early material, was able to reissue them in America and this time the records sold in the millions. Capitol filed a lawsuit to stop Vee Jay from distributing the tracks, but was not successful. In October 1964, Vee-Jay's license to distribute the Beatles recordings they possessed expired, so Capitol finally got the American distribution rights for the album.