All Stories

  1. Assessing biotic response to anthropogenic forcing using mollusc assemblages from the Po-Adriatic System (Italy)
  2. ONSHORE-OFFSHORE TRENDS IN THE TEMPORAL RESOLUTION OF MOLLUSCAN DEATH ASSEMBLAGES: HOW AGE-FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTIONS REVEAL QUATERNARY SEA-LEVEL HISTORY
  3. Assessing biotic response to anthropogenic forcing using mollusc assemblages from the Po–Adriatic System (Italy)
  4. Compositional fidelity of phyla and classes in marine benthic associations
  5. Concordant Spatial Gradients in Predation Intensity and Productivity Archived in Surficial Mollusk Shell Accumulations in Seagrass Meadows Along the Gulf Coast of Florida
  6. Conservation Paleobiology and Taphonomy: Differential Preservation and Time-Averaging of Echinoids and Mollusks
  7. Distribution and Diversity of Sediment-Dwelling Echinoids of the Central Florida Keys
  8. Mollusk Response Under Ocean Acidification in Shallow Marine Settings of Sicily (Central Mediterranean)
  9. Paleofidelity: An R Package for Measuring and Visualizing Live-Dead Fidelity
  10. Spatial distribution, diversity, and taphonomy of clypeasteroid and spatangoid echinoids of the central Florida Keys
  11. Resilient biotic response to long‐term climate change in the Adriatic Sea
  12. MORPHOLOGICAL DISPARITY AND VARIABILITY OF THE FOSSIL GASTROPOD HYSTRIVASUM (FAMILY TURBINELLIDAE)
  13. An asynchronous Mesozoic marine revolution: the Cenozoic intensification of predation on echinoids
  14. A multiscale view of the Phanerozoic fossil record reveals the three major biotic transitions
  15. Variation in Seagrass-Associated Macroinvertebrate Communities Along the Gulf Coast of Peninsular Florida: An Exploration of Patterns and Ecological Consequences
  16. COMPARING DIRECT CARBONATE AND STANDARD GRAPHITE 14C DETERMINATIONS OF BIOGENIC CARBONATES
  17. Live, dead, and fossil mollusks in Florida freshwater springs and spring-fed rivers: Taphonomic pathways and the formation of multisourced, time-averaged death assemblages
  18. OCCURRENCE OF THE BRACHIOPOD TICHOSINA IN DEEP-SEA CORAL BOTTOMS OF THE CARIBBEAN SEA AND ITS PALEOENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS
  19. Ecological regime shift preserved in the Anthropocene stratigraphic record
  20. CHARACTERIZATION OF TRACES OF PREDATION AND PARASITISM ON FOSSIL ECHINOIDS
  21. Spatial point pattern analysis of traces (SPPAT): An approach for visualizing and quantifying site-selectivity patterns of drilling predators
  22. Idiographic and nomothetic approaches to heterogeneity are complementary: Response to comments on “Evaluating the influences of temperature, primary production, and evolutionary history on bivalve growth rates”
  23. A multiscale view of the Phanerozoic fossil record reveals the three major biotic transitions
  24. Seasonal oyster harvesting recorded in a Late Archaic period shell ring
  25. Long-term persistence of structured habitats: seagrass meadows as enduring hotspots of biodiversity and faunal stability
  26. Evaluating the influences of temperature, primary production, and evolutionary history on bivalve growth rates
  27. Predation in the marine fossil record: Studies, data, recognition, environmental factors, and behavior
  28. Vaquita Face Extinction from Bycatch. Comment on Manjarrez-Bringas, N. et al., Lessons for Sustainable Development: Marine Mammal Conservation Policies and Its Social and Economic Effects. Sustainability 2018, 10, 2185
  29. Comment on Rojas-Bracho and Colleagues (2019): Unsubstantiated Claims Can Lead to Tragic Conservation Outcomes
  30. Mollusk shell assemblages as archives of spatial structuring of benthic communities around subtropical islands
  31. PREDATION-FACILITATED PRESERVATION OF ECHINOIDS IN A TROPICAL MARINE ENVIRONMENT
  32. Stratigraphic signatures of mass extinctions: ecological and sedimentary determinants
  33. Regional surveys of macrobenthic shelf invertebrate communities in Onslow Bay, North Carolina, U.S.A.
  34. Breaking down the lithification bias: the effect of preferential sampling of larger specimens on the estimate of species richness, evenness, and average specimen size
  35. Taphonomic Megabias in the Fossil Record of Lingulide Brachiopods
  36. The role of habitat selection on the diversity of macrobenthic communities in three gulfs of the Cuban Archipelago
  37. One fossil record, multiple time resolutions: Disparate time-averaging of echinoids and mollusks on a Holocene carbonate platform
  38. Systematic vertical and lateral changes in quality and time resolution of the macrofossil record: Insights from Holocene transgressive deposits, Po coastal plain, Italy
  39. Surges in trematode prevalence linked to centennial-scale flooding events in the Adriatic
  40. Hierarchical complexity and the size limits of life
  41. Increase in predator-prey size ratios throughout the Phanerozoic history of marine ecosystems
  42. Global biogeography of Albian ammonoids: A network-based approach
  43. The post‐Palaeozoic fossil record of drilling predation on lingulide brachiopods
  44. Surrogate taxa and fossils as reliable proxies of spatial biodiversity patterns in marine benthic communities
  45. Radiocarbon-calibrated amino acid racemization ages from Holocene sand dollars (Peronella peronii)
  46. Body Size Evolution Across the Geozoic
  47. Using fossils to understand modern extinction
  48. Use of Quartz Microtextural Analysis To Assess Possible Proglacial Deposition For the Pennsylvanian–Permian Cutler Formation (Colorado, U.S.A.)
  49. Environmental and scale-dependent evolutionary trends in the body size of crustaceans
  50. The fossil record of drilling predation on barnacles
  51. Growth, inter- and intraspecific variation, palaeobiogeography, taphonomy and systematics of the Cenozoic ghost shrimpGlypturus
  52. Differential responses of marine communities to natural and anthropogenic changes
  53. Quantitative Bathymetric Models for Late Quaternary Transgressive-Regressive Cycles of the Po Plain, Italy
  54. STOWING AWAY ON SHIPS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT: SCLEROBIONT ASSEMBLAGES ON INDIVIDUALLY DATED BIVALVE AND BRACHIOPOD SHELLS FROM A SUBTROPICAL SHELF
  55. Utility of Marine Benthic Associations as a Multivariate Proxy of Paleobathymetry: A Direct Test from Recent Coastal Ecosystems of North Carolina
  56. A continuous multi-millennial record of surficial bivalve mollusk shells from the São Paulo Bight, Brazilian shelf
  57. PREDATION ON MODERN AND FOSSIL BRACHIOPODS: ASSESSING CHEMICAL DEFENSES AND PALATABILITY
  58. The effects of limpet morphology on predation by adult cancrid crabs
  59. Vanishing Clams on an Iberian Beach: Local Consequences and Global Implications of Accelerating Loss of Shells to Tourism
  60. Jackknife-corrected parametric bootstrap estimates of growth rates in bivalve mollusks using nearest living relatives
  61. The influence of reefs on the rise of Mesozoic marine crustaceans
  62. Sequence stratigraphy and the resolution of the fossil record
  63. SEASONAL VARIATION IN ECOLOGICAL AND TAPHONOMIC PROCESSES RECORDED IN SHELLY DEATH ASSEMBLAGES
  64. Sub-centennial resolution amino acid geochronology for the freshwater mussel Lampsilis for the last 2000 years
  65. Thermally-induced structural and chemical alteration of organic-walled microfossils: an experimental approach to understanding fossil preservation in metasediments
  66. Drilling Predation on Serpulid Polychaetes (Ditrupa arietina) from the Pliocene of the Cope Basin, Murcia Region, Southeastern Spain
  67. Biomineralization, taphonomy, and diagenesis of Paleozoic lingulide brachiopod shells preserved in silicified mudstone concretions
  68. Traces of predation/parasitism recorded in Eocene brachiopods from the Castle Hayne Limestone, North Carolina, USA
  69. DEATH AND DISINTEGRATION IN BAHAMAS: TAPHONOMIC PATTERNS AND PROCESSES IN TROPICAL ISLAND SETTINGS
  70. THE GEOZOIC SUPEREON
  71. Quantifying the Timing and Rate of Crustal Evolution: Global Compilation of Radiometrically Dated Detrital Zircon Grains
  72. Spatial variation of erosion in a small, glaciated basin in the Teton Range, Wyoming, based on detrital apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology
  73. Changes in shell durability of common marine taxa through the Phanerozoic: evidence for biological rather than taphonomic drivers
  74. The evolutionary consequences of oxygenic photosynthesis: a body size perspective
  75. The rise of bilaterians: a few closing comments
  76. Non-avian theropod dinosaurs from the early Late Cretaceous of central Europe
  77. CONFAMILIAL PREDATION IN PLIOCENE NATICID GASTROPODS FROM SOUTHERN FRANCE: UTILITY OF PREEXISTING COLLECTIONS IN QUANTITATIVE PALEOECOLOGY
  78. Theoretical diversity of the marine biosphere
  79. Quantitative comparisons and models of time-averaging in bivalve and brachiopod shell accumulations
  80. Bouchardia rosea, a vanishing brachiopod species of the Brazilian platform: taphonomy, historical ecology and conservation paleobiology
  81. Quantitative evaluation of the biostratigraphic distribution of acanthomorphic acritarchs in the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation in the Yangtze Gorges area, South China
  82. The rise of bilaterians: a reply
  83. Osmotrophy in modular Ediacara organisms
  84. Distinguishing Milankovitch‐Driven Processes in the Rock Record from Stochasticity Using Computer‐Simulated Stratigraphy
  85. Two-phase increase in the maximum size of life over 3.5 billion years reflects biological innovation and environmental opportunity
  86. CRITICAL ISSUES OF SCALE IN PALEOECOLOGY
  87. The Microstructural Record of Predation: A New Approach for Identifying Predatory Drill Holes
  88. Taphonomy and compositional fidelity of Quaternary fossil assemblages of terrestrial gastropods from carbonate-rich environments of the Canary Islands
  89. Stable isotope (δ18O, δ13C, and δD) signatures of recent terrestrial communities from a low-latitude, oceanic setting: Endemic land snails, plants, rain, and carbonate sediments from the eastern Canary Islands
  90. The Avalon Explosion: Evolution of Ediacara Morphospace
  91. Testing limiting similarity in Quaternary terrestrial gastropods
  92. POTENTIAL PALEOECOLOGIC BIASES FROM SIZE-FILTERING OF FOSSILS: STRATEGIES FOR SIEVING
  93. QUANTITATIVE TAPHONOMY OF A TRIASSIC REPTILE TANYTRACHELOS AHYNIS FROM THE COW BRANCH FORMATION, DAN RIVER BASIN, SOLITE QUARRY, VIRGINIA
  94. Strong coupling of predation intensity and diversity in the Phanerozoic fossil record
  95. Scale and structure of time-averaging (age mixing) in terrestrial gastropod assemblages from Quaternary eolian deposits of the eastern Canary Islands
  96. SEQUENCE STRATIGRAPHIC ANATOMY OF DIVERSITY PATTERNS: LATE QUATERNARY BENTHIC MOLLUSKS OF THE PO PLAIN, ITALY
  97. PREDATOR-PREY INTERACTIONS: EXPERIMENTAL AND FIELD APPROACHES
  98. COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF DRILLING FREQUENCIES IN RECENT BRACHIOPOD-MOLLUSK ASSOCIATIONS FROM THE SOUTHERN BRAZILIAN SHELF
  99. BODY SIZE ESTIMATES FROM THE LITERATURE: UTILITY AND POTENTIAL FOR MACROEVOLUTIONARY STUDIES
  100. Aspartic acid racemization dating of Holocene brachiopods and bivalves from the southern Brazilian shelf, South Atlantic
  101. The Temporal Resolution of Epibiont Assemblages: Are They Ecological Snapshots or Overexposures?
  102. 1.3 Billion years of acritarch history: An empirical morphospace approach
  103. Ecological, taxonomic, and taphonomic components of the post-Paleozoic increase in sample-level species diversity of marine benthos
  104. Are the most durable shelly taxa also the most common in the marine fossil record?
  105. Are the most durable shelly taxa also the most common in the marine fossil record?
  106. Secondary Evolutionary Escalation Between Brachiopods and Enemies of Other Prey
  107. Climatic, depositional and burial controls on diagenesis of Appalachian Carboniferous sandstones: qualitative and quantitative methods
  108. Freshwater Mussel Shells as Environmental Chronicles:  Geochemical and Taphonomic Signatures of Mercury-Related Extirpations in the North Fork Holston River, Virginia
  109. Recent brachiopods from the southern Brazilian shelf: palaeontological and biogeographical implications
  110. Stratigraphic paleoecology: Bathymetric signatures and sequence overprint of mollusk associations from upper Quaternary sequences of the Po Plain, Italy
  111. Edge-drilling on the brachiopod Perditocardinia cf. P. dubia from the Mississippian of Missouri (USA)
  112. Quantitative estimates of time-averaging in terebratulid brachiopod shell accumulations from a modern tropical shelf
  113. Average Lifetime and Age Spectra of Detrital Grains: Toward a Unifying Theory of Sedimentary Particles
  114. High‐Resolution Analysis of δ18O in the Biogenic Phosphate of Modern and Fossil Lingulid Brachiopods
  115. Intense drilling in the Carboniferous brachiopod Cardiarina cordata Cooper, 1956
  116. Increase in evenness and sampled alpha diversity through the Phanerozoic: Comparison of early Paleozoic and Cenozoic marine fossil assemblages
  117. Dead delta's former productivity: Two trillion shells at the mouth of the Colorado River
  118. Drilling Predation on Recent Clypeasteroid Echinoids from the Red Sea
  119. A fossil record full of holes: The Phanerozoic history of drilling predation: Comment and Reply
  120. Quantitative ichnology of triassic crayfish burrows(Camborygma eumekenomos): Ichnofossils as linkages to population paleoecology
  121. A fossil record full of holes: The Phanerozoic history of drilling predation
  122. The Reciprocal Taphonomic Model
  123. Phenetic discrimination of biometric simpletons: paleobiological implications of morphospecies in the lingulide brachiopod Glottidia
  124. Taphonomy of a Living Fossil: The Lingulide Brachiopod Glottidia palmeri Dall from Baja California, Mexico
  125. Time-Averaging, Overcompleteness, and the Geological Record
  126. Improving with age: The fossil record of lingulide brachiopods and the nature of taphonomic megabiases
  127. Ternary Taphograms: Triangular Diagrams Applied to Taphonomic Analysis
  128. Taphofacies analysis of recent shelly cheniers (beach ridges), northeastern baja california, Mexico
  129. Shell survival and time‐averaging in nearshore and shelf environments: estimates from the radiocarbon literature
  130. Morphometric analysis of predatory drillholes
  131. Post-Collection Taphonomy: Shell Destruction and the Chevrolet
  132. On the Morphological History of Proterozoic and Cambrian Acritarchs