DSpace Repository

Browsing by Author "Marshall, Charles R."

Browsing by Author "Marshall, Charles R."

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Wilke, Thomas; Hauffe, Torsten; Jovanovska, Elena; Cvetkoska, Aleksandra; Donders, Timme; Ekschmitt, Klemens; Francke, Alexander; Lacey, Jack H.; Levkov, Zlatko; Marshall, Charles R.; Neubauer, Thomas A.; Silvestro, Daniele; Stelbrink, Björn; Vogel, Hendrik; Albrecht, Christian; Holtvoeth, Jens; Krastel, Sebastian; Leicher, Niklas; Leng, Melanie J.; Lindhorst, Katja; Masi, Alessia; Ognjanova-Rumenova, Nadja; Panagiotopoulos, Konstantinos; Reed, Jane M.; Sadori, Laura; Tofilovska, Slavica; Van Bocxlaer, Bert; Wagner-Cremer, Friederike; Wesselingh, Frank P.; Wolters, Volkmar; Zanchetta, Giovanni; Zhang, Xiaosen; Wagner, Bernd (2020)
    The scarcity of high-resolution empirical data directly tracking diversity over time limits our understanding of speciation and extinction dynamics and the drivers of rate changes. Here, we analyze a continuous species-level ...
  • Lim, Jun Y.; Marshall, Charles R.; Zimmer, Elizabeth A.; Wagner, Warren L. (2019)
    Aim Our understanding of the biogeographical history of the flora of the Pacific is hampered by limited geographical sampling, and the evolutionary history for many species-rich lineages in the Pacific remain poorly known. ...
  • Alroy, John; Aberhan, Martin; Bottjer, David J.; Foote, Michael; Fursich, Franz T.; Harries, Peter J.; Hendy, Austin J. W.; Holland, Steven M.; Ivany, Linda C.; Kiessling, Wolfgang; Kosnik, Matthew A.; Marshall, Charles R.; McGowan, Alistair J.; Miller, Arnold I.; Olszewski, Thomas D.; Patzkowsky, Mark E.; Peters, Shanan E.; Villier, Loic; Wagner, Peter J.; Bonuso, Nicole; Borkow, Philip S.; Brenneis, Benjamin; Clapham, Matthew E.; Fall, Leigh M.; Ferguson, Chad A.; Hanson, Victoria L.; Krug, Andrew Z.; Layou, Karen M.; Leckey, Erin H.; Nurnberg, Sabine; Powers, Catherine M.; Sessa, Jocelyn A.; Simpson, Carl; Tomasovych, Adam; Visaggi, Christy C. (2008)
    It has previously been thought that there was a steep Cretaceous and Cenozoic radiation of marine invertebrates. This pattern can be replicated with a new data set of fossil occurrences representing 3.5 million specimens, ...

Search DSpace

Browse

My Account