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4. The Discovery of Conodont Anatomy and Its Importance for Understanding the Early History of Vertebrates
-
Richard J. Aldridge
and Derek E. G. Briggs
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction. Paleontology at the High Table 1
-
Part I. Major Innovations in Paleobiology
- 1. The Emergence of Paleobiology 15
- 2. The Fossil Record: Biological or Geological Signal? 43
- 3. Biogeography and Evolution in the Early Paleozoic 60
- 4. The Discovery of Conodont Anatomy and Its Importance for Understanding the Early History of Vertebrates 73
- 5. Emergence of Precambrian Paleobiology: A New Field of Science 89
- 6. Dinosaurs at the Table 111
- 7. Ladders, Bushes, Punctuations, and Clades: Hominid Paleobiology in the Late Twentieth Century 122
- 8. Punctuated Equilibria and Speciation: What Does It Mean to Be a Darwinian? 149
- 9. Molecular Evolution vis- à- vis Paleontology 176
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Part II. The Historical and Conceptual Significance of Recent Paleontology
- 10. Beyond Detective Work: Empirical Testing in Paleontology 201
- 11. Taxic Paleobiology and the Pursuit of a Unifi ed Evolutionary Theory 215
- 12. Ideas in Dinosaur Paleontology: Resonating to Social and Political Context 239
- 13. Reg Sprigg and the Discovery of the Ediacara Fauna in South Australia: Its Approach to the High Table 254
- 14. The Morphological Tradition in German Paleontology: Otto Jaekel, Walter Zimmermann, and Otto Schindewolf 279
- 15. “Radical” or “Conservative”? The Origin and Early Reception of Punctuated Equilibrium 301
- 16. The Shape of Evolution: The MBL Model and Clade Shape 326
- 17. Ritual Patricide: Why Stephen Jay Gould Assassinated George Gaylord Simpson 346
- 18. The Consensus That Changed the Paleobiological World 364
-
Part III. Reflections on Recent Paleobiology
- 19. The Infusion of Biology into Paleontological Research 385
- 20. From Empirical Paleoecology to Evolutionary Paleobiology: A Personal Journey 398
- 21. Intellectual Evolution across an Academic Landscape 416
- 22. The Problem of Punctuational Speciation and Trends in the Fossil Record 423
- 23. Punctuated Equilibrium versus Community Evolution 433
- 24. An Interview with David M. Raup 459
- 25. Paleontology in the Twenty- first Century 471
- 26. Punctuations and Paradigms: Has Paleobiology Been through a Paradigm Shift? 518
- Contributors 529
- Index 537
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- Introduction. Paleontology at the High Table 1
-
Part I. Major Innovations in Paleobiology
- 1. The Emergence of Paleobiology 15
- 2. The Fossil Record: Biological or Geological Signal? 43
- 3. Biogeography and Evolution in the Early Paleozoic 60
- 4. The Discovery of Conodont Anatomy and Its Importance for Understanding the Early History of Vertebrates 73
- 5. Emergence of Precambrian Paleobiology: A New Field of Science 89
- 6. Dinosaurs at the Table 111
- 7. Ladders, Bushes, Punctuations, and Clades: Hominid Paleobiology in the Late Twentieth Century 122
- 8. Punctuated Equilibria and Speciation: What Does It Mean to Be a Darwinian? 149
- 9. Molecular Evolution vis- à- vis Paleontology 176
-
Part II. The Historical and Conceptual Significance of Recent Paleontology
- 10. Beyond Detective Work: Empirical Testing in Paleontology 201
- 11. Taxic Paleobiology and the Pursuit of a Unifi ed Evolutionary Theory 215
- 12. Ideas in Dinosaur Paleontology: Resonating to Social and Political Context 239
- 13. Reg Sprigg and the Discovery of the Ediacara Fauna in South Australia: Its Approach to the High Table 254
- 14. The Morphological Tradition in German Paleontology: Otto Jaekel, Walter Zimmermann, and Otto Schindewolf 279
- 15. “Radical” or “Conservative”? The Origin and Early Reception of Punctuated Equilibrium 301
- 16. The Shape of Evolution: The MBL Model and Clade Shape 326
- 17. Ritual Patricide: Why Stephen Jay Gould Assassinated George Gaylord Simpson 346
- 18. The Consensus That Changed the Paleobiological World 364
-
Part III. Reflections on Recent Paleobiology
- 19. The Infusion of Biology into Paleontological Research 385
- 20. From Empirical Paleoecology to Evolutionary Paleobiology: A Personal Journey 398
- 21. Intellectual Evolution across an Academic Landscape 416
- 22. The Problem of Punctuational Speciation and Trends in the Fossil Record 423
- 23. Punctuated Equilibrium versus Community Evolution 433
- 24. An Interview with David M. Raup 459
- 25. Paleontology in the Twenty- first Century 471
- 26. Punctuations and Paradigms: Has Paleobiology Been through a Paradigm Shift? 518
- Contributors 529
- Index 537