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1. Unraveling the Mineralogical Complexity of Sediment Iron Speciation Using Sequential Extractions

3. Deep-water first occurrences of Ediacara biota prior to the Shuram carbon isotope excursion in the Wernecke Mountains, Yukon, Canada.

4. Lithium isotopic constraints on the evolution of continental clay mineral factory and marine oxygenation in the earliest Paleozoic Era.

5. Thermal optima in the hypoxia tolerance of marine ectotherms: Physiological causes and biogeographic consequences.

6. Constraining the oxygen requirements for modern microbial eukaryote diversity.

7. Oxygen availability and body mass modulate ectotherm responses to ocean warming.

8. Mesoproterozoic surface oxygenation accompanied major sedimentary manganese deposition at 1.4 and 1.1 Ga.

9. Integrative Approaches to Understanding Organismal Responses to Aquatic Deoxygenation.

10. Breathless through Time: Oxygen and Animals across Earth's History.

11. Eukaryogenesis and oxygen in Earth history.

12. Marine sponges in the once and future ocean.

13. The Sedimentary Geochemistry and Paleoenvironments Project.

14. Decreasing Phanerozoic extinction intensity as a consequence of Earth surface oxygenation and metazoan ecophysiology.

15. Isotopic analyses of Ordovician-Silurian siliceous skeletons indicate silica-depleted Paleozoic oceans.

16. A long-term record of early to mid-Paleozoic marine redox change.

17. Calibrating the coevolution of Ediacaran life and environment.

18. Ediacaran reorganization of the marine phosphorus cycle.

19. On the co-evolution of surface oxygen levels and animals.

20. Persistent global marine euxinia in the early Silurian.

23. Oxygen, temperature and the deep-marine stenothermal cradle of Ediacaran evolution.

24. Oxygenated Mesoproterozoic lake revealed through magnetic mineralogy.

25. Temperature-dependent hypoxia explains biogeography and severity of end-Permian marine mass extinction.

26. Demosponge steroid biomarker 26-methylstigmastane provides evidence for Neoproterozoic animals.

27. The Temporal and Environmental Context of Early Animal Evolution: Considering All the Ingredients of an "Explosion".

28. On the edge of exceptional preservation: insights into the role of redox state in Burgess Shale-type taphonomic windows from the Mural Formation, Alberta, Canada.

29. Biodiversity response to natural gradients of multiple stressors on continental margins.

30. Biotic replacement and mass extinction of the Ediacara biota.

31. Statistical analysis of iron geochemical data suggests limited late Proterozoic oxygenation.

32. Redox heterogeneity of subsurface waters in the Mesoproterozoic ocean.

33. Oxygen and animals in Earth history.

34. miRNAs: small genes with big potential in metazoan phylogenetics.

35. Oxygen, ecology, and the Cambrian radiation of animals.

36. The identification of microRNAs in calcisponges: independent evolution of microRNAs in basal metazoans.

37. Reconstruction of family-level phylogenetic relationships within Demospongiae (Porifera) using nuclear encoded housekeeping genes.

38. A molecular palaeobiological hypothesis for the origin of aplacophoran molluscs and their derivation from chiton-like ancestors.

39. MicroRNAs support a turtle + lizard clade.

40. The Cambrian conundrum: early divergence and later ecological success in the early history of animals.

41. Molecular paleobiological insights into the origin of the Brachiopoda.

42. Rangeomorphs, Thectardis (Porifera?) and dissolved organic carbon in the Ediacaran oceans.

43. A placozoan affinity for Dickinsonia and the evolution of late Proterozoic metazoan feeding modes.

44. Where's the glass? Biomarkers, molecular clocks, and microRNAs suggest a 200-Myr missing Precambrian fossil record of siliceous sponge spicules.

45. MicroRNAs resolve an apparent conflict between annelid systematics and their fossil record.

46. Phylogenetic-signal dissection of nuclear housekeeping genes supports the paraphyly of sponges and the monophyly of Eumetazoa.

47. The deep evolution of metazoan microRNAs.

48. The mitochondrial genome of the hexactinellid sponge Aphrocallistes vastus: evidence for programmed translational frameshifting.

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