Molds, molecules, and metazoa: growing points in evolutionary biology

"Through an integration of systematics, genetics, and related disciplines, the Modern Synthesis of Evolutionary Biology came into being over fifty years ago. Knowledge of evolution has since been transformed by several revolutions: the way we interpret the fossil record has been radically affec...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Princeton, NJ u.a. Princeton Univ. Press 1992
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Online Access:Inhaltsverzeichnis
Summary:"Through an integration of systematics, genetics, and related disciplines, the Modern Synthesis of Evolutionary Biology came into being over fifty years ago. Knowledge of evolution has since been transformed by several revolutions: the way we interpret the fossil record has been radically affected by theories of continental drift and asteroid impacts; the way we classify organisms has been influenced by the development of cladistics. Perhaps the most dramatic revolution has been the explosion in molecular biology of information about the genome. Aiming to capture the excitement of modern evolutionary biology, seven prominent scientists here explore important issues and problems in their areas of specialization and identify the most promising directions of future research." "The scope of this volume ranges from macroevolutionary patterns in the Precambrian to molecular evolution of the genome. Major themes include the origin and maintenance of variation and the causes of evolutionary change. Chapters on paleontology, ecology, behavior, development, and cell and molecular biology are contributed by James W. Valentine, Graham Bell, Mary Jane West-Eberhard, Leo Buss and Matthew Dick, Marc Kirschner, and Martin Kreitman. The book contains an introductory chapter by John Tyler Bonner, whose seminal work is honored here, and an overview by Peter R. Grant."--BOOK JACKET.
Physical Description:X, 181 S. Ill., graph. Darst.
ISBN:0691087687

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