215 results on '"Crame, J. Alistair"'
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2. Cretaceous stratigraphy of Antarctica and its global significance
3. Molecular phylogenetics of the superfamily Stromboidea (Caenogastropoda): New insights from increased taxon sampling.
4. Cretaceous stratigraphy of Antarctica and its global significance
5. Tracking the tempo of a continental margin arc: Insights from a forearc succession in West Antarctica
6. Early Cenozoic evolution of the latitudinal diversity gradient
7. Key stages in the evolution of the Antarctic marine fauna
8. Differentiation of high-latitude and polar marine faunas in a greenhouse world
9. “Business as usual”: Drilling predation across the K-Pg mass extinction event in Antarctica
10. How Well Do We Know the Antarctic Marine Fauna? A Preliminary Study of Macroecological and Biogeographical Patterns in Southern Ocean Gastropod and Bivalve Molluscs
11. Large-Scale Biogeographic Patterns in Marine Mollusks: A Confluence of History and Productivity?
12. Evolution of Taxonomic Diversity Gradients in the Marine Realm: A Comparison of Late Jurassic and Recent Bivalve Faunas
13. Taxonomic Diversity Gradients through Geological Time
14. Evolution of Taxonomic Diversity Gradients in the Marine Realm: Evidence From the Composition of Recent Bivalve Faunas
15. The significance of a new nephropid lobster from the Miocene of Antarctica
16. Marine High Mg Calcite Cements in Teredolites-Bored Fossil Wood; Evidence for Cool Paleoclimates in the Eocene La Meseta Formation, Seymour Island, Antarctica
17. Late Cenozoic evolution of the latitudinal diversity gradient
18. Late Cenozoic evolution of the latitudinal diversity gradient
19. Antarctic geoconservation : a review of current systems and practices
20. The bivalve Anopaea (Inoceramidae) from the Upper Jurassic–lowermost Cretaceous of Mexico
21. Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) shallow water hydrocarbon seeps from Snow Hill and Seymour Islands, James Ross Basin, Antarctica
22. The taxonomy and palaeobiogeography of small chorate dinoflagellate cysts from the Late Cretaceous to Quaternary of Antarctica
23. Origin of the tropical-polar biodiversity contrast
24. Origin of the tropical–polar biodiversity contrast
25. FIRST FOSSIL SPONGE FROM ANTARCTICA AND ITS PALEOBIOGEOGRAPHICAL SIGNIFICANCE
26. Evolutionary dynamics at high latitudes: speciation and extinction in polar marine faunas
27. The Early Miocene Cape Melville Formation fossil assemblage and the evolution of modern Antarctic marine communities
28. The Southern Ocean Benthic Fauna and Climate Change: A Historical Perspective [and Discussion]
29. Coniacian ammonites from James Ross Island, Antarctica
30. Lower Cretaceous bivalve biostratigraphy of Antarctica
31. Intrinsic and extrinsic controls on the diversification of the Bivalvia
32. The fossil record of durophagous predation in the James Ross Basin over the last 125 million years
33. Nature and timing of biotic recovery in Antarctic benthic marine ecosystems following the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction
34. The historical component of marine taxonomic diversity gradients
35. Diversity, latitude and time: Patterns in the shallow sea
36. Nature and timing of biotic recovery in Antarctic benthic marine ecosystems following the Cretaceous–Palaeogene mass extinction
37. High benthic methane flux in low sulfate oceans: Evidence from carbon isotopes in Late Cretaceous Antarctic bivalves
38. The impact of the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) mass extinction event on the global sulfur cycle: Evidence from Seymour Island, Antarctica
39. Left in the cold? Evolutionary origin of Laternula elliptica a keystone bivalve species of Antarctic benthos
40. Upper Cretaceous echinoids from James Ross Basin, Antarctica
41. High benthic methane flux in low sulfate oceans: Evidence from carbon isotopes in Late Cretaceous Antarctic bivalves
42. Evolution and extinction of Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous) cephalopods from the López de Bertodano Formation, Seymour Island, Antarctica
43. Left in the cold? Evolutionary origin of Laternula elliptica, a keystone bivalve species of Antarctic benthos
44. Macrofossil evidence for a rapid and severe Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction in Antarctica
45. Macrofossil evidence for a rapid and severe Cretaceous–Paleogene mass extinction in Antarctica
46. Evolution and extinction of Maastrictian (Late Cretaceous) cephalopods from the López de Bertodano Formation, Seymour Island, Antarctica
47. A cool temperate climate on the Antarctic Peninsula during the latest Cretaceous and early Paleogene
48. Evolutionary setting
49. The early origin of the Antarctic Marine Fauna and its evolutionary implications
50. The Early Miocene Cape Melville Formation fossil assemblage and the evolution of modern Antarctic marine communities
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