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The largest corona of fossil sea urchin in Slovenia
Published 2010-12-01“…The article deals with the largest corona of a fossil sea urchin in Slovenia. The corona was found in Badenianbeds in surroundings of the Levstik mill near Podsreda. …”
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Will We Ever Stop Using Fossil Fuels?
Published 2016“…In many respects, the world is betting that we will greatly reduce the use of fossil fuels because we will run out of inexpensive fossil fuels (there will be decreases in supply) and/or technological advances will lead to the discovery of less-expensive low-carbon technologies (there will be decreases in demand). …”
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A Field Guide to Finding Fossils on Mars
Published 2018“…Informed by (1) stratigraphic, mineralogical and geochemical data collected by previous and current missions, (2) Earth's fossil record, and (3) experimental studies of organic decay and preservation, we here consider whether, how, and where fossils and isotopic biosignatures could have been preserved in the depositional environments and mineralizing media thought to have been present in habitable settings on early Mars. …”
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Energy and development: Fossil fuels in developing countries
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Cheaper Fossil Fuels: The Relevance of Nuclear Energy
Published 2016“…As carbon-intensive fossil fuels have become cheaper, would nuclear power continue to be relevant? …”
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Fossil manganese nodules from Sicily [5]
Published 1967“…FROM the stratigraphically condensed limestones of the West Sicilian Jurassic, which overlie a white Trias-Lias reefoid facies, Wendt recorded fossil ferromanganese nodules 1. © 1967 Nature Publishing Group.…”
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Fossilization can mislead analyses of phenotypic disparity
Published 2023“…Analyses of morphological disparity can incorporate living and fossil taxa to facilitate the exploration of how phenotypic variation changes through time. …”
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Early fossil record of Euarthropoda and the Cambrian Explosion
Published 2018“…Euarthropoda is one of the best-preserved fossil animal groups and has been the most diverse animal phylum for over 500 million years. …”
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Fossil evidence for an ancient divergence of lorises and galagos
Published 2003“…Here we describe the first demonstrable crown strepsirrhines from the Afro-Arabian Palaeogene—a galagid and a possible lorisid from the late middle Eocene of Egypt, the latter of which provides the earliest fossil evidence for the distinctive strepsirrhine toothcomb. …”
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Biodiversity across space and time in the fossil record
Published 2021“…The fossil record is the primary source of information on how biodiversity has varied in deep time, providing unique insight on the long-term dynamics of diversification and their drivers. …”
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Deciphering the early evolution of echinoderms with Cambrian fossils
Published 2014“…Based on the sister‐group relationships and ontogeny of modern species and new fossil discoveries, we now know that the first echinoderms were bilaterally symmetrical, represented in the fossil record by Ctenoimbricata and some early ctenocystoids. …”
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Fossil pollen as a guide to conservation in the Galapagos.
Published 2008“…Paleoecological evidence from the past 8000 years in the Galápagos Islands shows that six presumed introduced or doubtfully native species (Ageratum conyzoides, Borreria laevis/Diodia radula-type, Brickellia diffusa, Cuphea carthagenensis, Hibiscus diversifolius, and Ranunculus flagelliformis) are in fact native to the archipelago. Fossil pollen and macrofossils from four sites in the highlands of Santa Cruz Island reveal that all were present thousands of years before the advent of human impact, refuting their classification as introduced species. …”
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Palaeontology: Tiny fossils in the animal family tree
Published 2017“…Newly discovered microscopic fossils might shed light on the early evolution of the deuterostomes, the animal group that includes vertebrates. …”
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Contemporaneous trace and body fossils from a late Pleistocene Lakebed in Victoria, Australia, allow assessment of bias in the fossil record.
Published 2013-01-01“…The co-occurrence of vertebrate trace and body fossils within a single geological formation is rare and the probability of these parallel records being contemporaneous (i.e. on or near the same bedding plane) is extremely low. …”
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