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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Life On The Edge: The Cambrian Marine Realm And Oxygenation, Sara Pruss, Benjamin C. Gill May 2024

Life On The Edge: The Cambrian Marine Realm And Oxygenation, Sara Pruss, Benjamin C. Gill

Geosciences: Faculty Publications

The beginning of the Phanerozoic saw two biological events that set the stage for all life that was to come: (a) the Cambrian Explosion (the appearance of most marine invertebrate phyla) and (b) the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE), the subsequent substantial accumulation of marine biodiversity. Here, we examine the current state of understanding of marine environments and ecosystems from the late Ediacaran through the Early Ordovician, which spans this biologically important interval. Through a compilation and review of the existing geochemical, mineralogical, sedimentological, and fossil records, we argue that this interval was one of sustained low and variable marine …


Mercury Chemostratigraphy Across The Cambrian Series 2 – Series 3 Boundary: Evidence For Increased Volcanic Activity Coincident With Extinction?, L. E. Faggetter, P. B. Wignall, S. B. Pruss, D. S. Jones, S. Grasby, M. Widdowson, R. J. Newton Apr 2019

Mercury Chemostratigraphy Across The Cambrian Series 2 – Series 3 Boundary: Evidence For Increased Volcanic Activity Coincident With Extinction?, L. E. Faggetter, P. B. Wignall, S. B. Pruss, D. S. Jones, S. Grasby, M. Widdowson, R. J. Newton

Geosciences: Faculty Publications

Flood basalt volcanism represented by the Kalkarindji Province (Australia) is temporally associated with a trilobite mass extinction at the Cambrian Series 2 – Series 3 boundary, providing one of the oldest potential links between volcanism and biotic crisis in the Phanerozoic. However, the relative timing of flood basalt volcanism (Kalkarindji Province, Australia) and the trilobite extinctions, first recorded in North America, is not known. Mercury (Hg) enrichment in the sedimentary record provides a potential proxy for volcanism which may facilitate improved chronologies of eruption and extinction. Here we report mercury records for three sections from mid-shelf strata of the Great …


Early Science With The Large Millimeter Telescope: Detection Of Dust Emission In Multiple Images Of A Normal Galaxy At Z > 4 Lensed By A Frontier Fields Cluster, Alexandra Pope, Alfredo Montaña, Andrew Battisti, Marceau Limousin, Danilo Marchesini, Grant W. Wilson, Stacy Alberts, Itziar Aretxaga, Vladimir Avila-Reese, José Ramón Bermejo-Climent, Gabriel Brammer, Hector Bravo-Alfaro, Daniela Calzetti, Ranga-Ram Chary, Ryan Cybulski, Mauro Giavalisco, David Hughes, Erin Kado-Fong, Erica Keller, Allison Kirkpatrick, Ivo Labbe, Daniel Lange-Vagle, James Lowenthal, Eric Murphy, Pascal Oesch, Daniel Rosa Gonzalez, David Sánchez-Argüelles, Heath Shipley, Mauro Stefanon, Olga Vega, Katherine Whitaker, Christina C. Williams, Min Yun, Jorge A. Zavala, Milagros Zeballos Apr 2017

Early Science With The Large Millimeter Telescope: Detection Of Dust Emission In Multiple Images Of A Normal Galaxy At Z > 4 Lensed By A Frontier Fields Cluster, Alexandra Pope, Alfredo Montaña, Andrew Battisti, Marceau Limousin, Danilo Marchesini, Grant W. Wilson, Stacy Alberts, Itziar Aretxaga, Vladimir Avila-Reese, José Ramón Bermejo-Climent, Gabriel Brammer, Hector Bravo-Alfaro, Daniela Calzetti, Ranga-Ram Chary, Ryan Cybulski, Mauro Giavalisco, David Hughes, Erin Kado-Fong, Erica Keller, Allison Kirkpatrick, Ivo Labbe, Daniel Lange-Vagle, James Lowenthal, Eric Murphy, Pascal Oesch, Daniel Rosa Gonzalez, David Sánchez-Argüelles, Heath Shipley, Mauro Stefanon, Olga Vega, Katherine Whitaker, Christina C. Williams, Min Yun, Jorge A. Zavala, Milagros Zeballos

Astronomy: Faculty Publications

We directly detect dust emission in an optically detected, multiply imaged galaxy lensed by the Frontier Fields cluster MACSJ0717.5+3745. We detect two images of the same galaxy at 1.1 mm with the AzTEC camera on the Large Millimeter Telescope leaving no ambiguity in the counterpart identification. This galaxy, MACS0717_Az9, is at z > 4 and the strong lensing model (μ=7.5) allows us to calculate an intrinsic IR luminosity of 9.7 × 1010 Le and an obscured star formation rate of 14.6 ± 4.5 Me yr−1. The unobscured star formation rate from the UV is only 4.1 ± 0.3 Me yr−1, which …


Climate Change, Managed Relocation, And The Risk Of Intra-Continental Plant Invasions: A Theoretical And Empirical Exploration Relative To The Flora Of New England, Jesse Bellemare, Bryan Connolly, Dov F. Sax Apr 2017

Climate Change, Managed Relocation, And The Risk Of Intra-Continental Plant Invasions: A Theoretical And Empirical Exploration Relative To The Flora Of New England, Jesse Bellemare, Bryan Connolly, Dov F. Sax

Biological Sciences: Faculty Publications

The high rate of anthropogenic climate change projected for coming decades and evidence of low migration ability for many species have led researchers to warn of a looming extinction crisis. This threat is expected to be most acute for small-ranged endemic species, which could see novel climatic conditions develop rapidly across the entirety of their limited geographic ranges. To avoid extinctions, some conservationists have proposed that climateimperiled species might be candidates for "assisted colonization" or "managed relocation" to new regions, outside their historical ranges. One major concern related to managed relocation is the possibility that some relocated species could later …


Extinction Intensity, Selectivity And Their Combined Macroevolutionary Influence In The Fossil Record, Jonathan L. Payne, Andrew M. Bush, Ellen T. Chang, Noel A. Heim, Matthew L. Knope, Sara B. Pruss Oct 2016

Extinction Intensity, Selectivity And Their Combined Macroevolutionary Influence In The Fossil Record, Jonathan L. Payne, Andrew M. Bush, Ellen T. Chang, Noel A. Heim, Matthew L. Knope, Sara B. Pruss

Geosciences: Faculty Publications

The macroevolutionary effects of extinction derive from both intensity of taxonomic losses and selectivity of losses with respect to ecology, physiology and/or higher taxonomy. Increasingly, palaeontologists are using logistic regression to quantify extinction selectivity because the selectivity metric is independent of extinction intensity and multiple predictor variables can be assessed simultaneously. We illustrate the use of logistic regression with an analysis of physiological buffering capacity and extinction risk in the Phanerozoic marine fossil record. We propose the geometric mean of extinction intensity and selectivity as a metric for the influence of extinction events. The end-Permian mass extinction had the largest …