Warning: mysql_query() [function.mysql-query]: Unable to save result set in /home/worldon2/public_html/wp-content/plugins/vsf-simple-block/vsf_simple_block_check.php on line 58
Ancient environment found to drive marine biodiversity
Print Shortlink

Ancient environment found to drive marine biodiversity

In fact, the fossil record can tell us a great deal, he says in a new study. In a report published on Nov. 25 in Science magazine, he and colleague Bjarte Hannisdal, of the visitor medical insurance University of Bergen in Norway, show that the evolution of marine life over the past 500 million years has been robustly and independently driven by both ocean chemistry and sea level changes.

Read the full article here:
Ancient environment found to drive marine biodiversity

Resources

Climate sensitivity to carbon dioxide more limited than extreme projections

ScienceDaily (Nov. 24, 2011) — A new study suggests that the rate of global warming from doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide may be less than the most flight cancellation insurance dire estimates of some previous studies — and, in… More

Ancient environment found to drive marine biodiversity

In fact, the fossil record can tell us a great deal, he says in a new study. In a report published on Nov. 25 in Science magazine, he and colleague Bjarte Hannisdal, of the visitor medical insurance University of… More

Related Posts:


Biofuels not food the biggest driver of ‘land grabbing’ deals, says report

In Africa, the impact of biofuels was even stronger with 66 per cent of land purchases used for biofuels. Food was next highest at 15 per cent. The report, ‘Land Rights and the Rush for Land’, involved the collaboration of over 40 different organisations in the research process – the biggest study to date. Report author Michael Taylor, from the International Land Coalition, says they were surprised by the dominance [...]

Climate change driving tropical birds to higher elevations

Tropical birds are moving to higher elevations because of climate change, but they may not be moving fast enough to keep up, according to a new study by Duke University researchers. It provides new evidence of their response to warming, but also shows there is a delay in their response. Forero-Medina and his colleagues used survey data collected on bird species in the region in the 1970s by John Terborgh, [...]