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Throughout its ~4.5 billion year history, the Earth has experienced periods of warming and cooling. However, the current drastic increase in global temperatures is well outside of the Earth’s cyclic norms, and evidence for human-caused global climate change is compelling. Paleoclimatology, the study of ancient climate conditions, provides ample evidence for human-caused global climate change by comparing recent conditions with those in the past.
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The fossil record documents only a small fraction of all organisms that have ever inhabited Earth. Fossilization is a rare process, and most organisms never become fossils. Moreover, the fossil record only exhibits fossils that have been discovered. Nevertheless, sedimentary rock fossils of long-lived, abundant, hard-bodied organisms dominate the fossil record. These fossils offer valuable information, such as an organism's physical form, behavior, and age. Studying the fossil record helps...
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Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

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Punctuated equilibrium and the fossil record.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·1983
Same author

DNA structures: the fourth approach to comparative biology.

Cold Spring Harbor symposia on quantitative biology·1983
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Evolution from the molecular viewpoint.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·1982
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Cretaceous endings.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·1981
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Invertebrate phylogeny.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·1980
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Fossil communities.

Science (New York, N.Y.)·1979

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 11, 2026

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Paleoceanography

T J Schopf

    Science (New York, N.Y.)
    |November 12, 1976
    PubMed
    Summary

    No abstract available in PubMed .

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