نتایج جستجو برای: mass extinction

تعداد نتایج: 500636  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2014
Seth D Burgess Samuel Bowring Shu-zhong Shen

The end-Permian mass extinction was the most severe loss of marine and terrestrial biota in the last 542 My. Understanding its cause and the controls on extinction/recovery dynamics depends on an accurate and precise age model. U-Pb zircon dates for five volcanic ash beds from the Global Stratotype Section and Point for the Permian-Triassic boundary at Meishan, China, define an age model for th...

Journal: :Science 1986
D M Raup

Virtually all plant and animal species that have ever lived on the earth are extinct. For this reason alone, extinction must play an important role in the evolution of life. The five largest mass extinctions of the past 600 million years are of greatest interest, but there is also a spectrum of smaller events, many of which indicate biological systems in profound stress. Extinction may be ep...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Luke J Matthews Christian Arnold Zarin Machanda Charles L Nunn

Body mass is thought to influence diversification rates, but previous studies have produced ambiguous results. We investigated patterns of diversification across 100 trees obtained from a new Bayesian inference of primate phylogeny that sampled trees in proportion to their posterior probabilities. First, we used simulations to assess the validity of previous studies that used linear models to i...

1999
P. N. Bhat

We report BV R surface photometry of a lenticular galaxy, NGC 4753 with prominent dust lanes. We have used the multicolor broadband photometry to study dustextinction as a function of wavelength and derived the extinction curve. We find the extinction curve of NGC 4753 to be similar to the Galactic extinction curve in the visible region which implies that the sizes of dust grains responsible fo...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1999
S A Bowring D H Erwin Y Isozaki

Mass extinctions are brief episodes of greatly increased extinction, commonly affecting both marine and terrestrial species. Since the origin of animals some 600 million years ago, there have been at least six major mass extinctions. The disappearance of the dinosaurs during the end-Cretaceous mass extinction 65 million years ago is perhaps the best known event, but the end-Permian (ca. 251 mil...

2008
David J. Bottjer

Modern study of the end-Permian mass extinction in the marine realm has involved intensive documentation of the fossil content, sedimentology, and chemostratigraphy of individual stratigraphic sections where the mass extinction interval is well preserved. These studies, coupled with innovative modeling of environmental conditions, have produced specific hypotheses for the mechanisms that caused...

Journal: :Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association 2009
William C Malm Gavin R McMeeking Sonia M Kreidenweis Ezra Levin Christian M Carrico Derek E Day Jeffrey L Collett Taehyoung Lee Amy P Sullivan Suresh Raja

Rocky Mountain National Park is experiencing reduced visibility and changes in ecosystem function due to increasing levels of oxidized and reduced nitrogen. The Rocky Mountain Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur (RoMANS) study was initiated to better understand the origins of sulfur and nitrogen species as well as the complex chemistry occurring during transport from source to receptor. As part of ...

2007
Andrew H. Knoll Richard K. Bambach Jonathan L. Payne Sara Pruss

Physiological research aimed at understanding current global change provides a basis for evaluating selective survivorship associated with Permo-Triassic mass extinction. Comparative physiology links paleontological and paleoenvironmental observations, supporting the hypothesis that an end-Permian trigger, most likely Siberian Trap volcanism, touched off a set of physically-linked perturbations...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2015
Claire Régnier Guillaume Achaz Amaury Lambert Robert H Cowie Philippe Bouchet Benoît Fontaine

Since the 1980s, many have suggested we are in the midst of a massive extinction crisis, yet only 799 (0.04%) of the 1.9 million known recent species are recorded as extinct, questioning the reality of the crisis. This low figure is due to the fact that the status of very few invertebrates, which represent the bulk of biodiversity, have been evaluated. Here we show, based on extrapolation from ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید