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Protists and Phanerozoic Evolution in the Oceans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 July 2017

Andrew H. Knoll*
Affiliation:
Botanical Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
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Extract

In an essay published in 1977, S.J. Gould argued that three major questions have dominated paleontological thinking for more than a century. Does the history of life have direction? What is the motor of evolutionary change? And, what is the tempo of change? Certainly, these “eternal metaphors” have figured prominently in the research of invertebrate paleontologists during the past decade. Temporal pattern has been sought in changing morphologies within lineages, the changing structure and composition of communities, trends in taxonomic diversity, and even the occurrence of mass extinctions. Drifting continents, changing climates and oceanic circulation patterns, biological interactions, and extraterrestrial influences have all been championed as significant determinants of evolutionary change. The punctuation/gradualism debate has generated an impressive body of stratigraphic and morphological data, if not an unambiguous resolution of the issue.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1987 University of Tennessee, Knoxville 

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