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Seth Finnegan

Showing results (11-20 of 34) with videos related to

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Science (New York, N.Y.)|August 3, 2013
Climate change and the past, present, and future of biotic interactionsJessica L Blois, Phoebe L Zarnetske, Matthew C Fitzpatrick, et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|April 19, 2012
Climate change and the selective signature of the Late Ordovician mass extinctionSeth Finnegan, Noel A Heim, Shanan E Peters, et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|October 5, 2021
Decreasing Phanerozoic extinction intensity as a consequence of Earth surface oxygenation and metazoan ecophysiologyRichard G Stockey, Alexandre Pohl, Andy Ridgwell, et al.
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|May 14, 2023
Was the Late Ordovician mass extinction truly exceptional?Christian M Ø Rasmussen, Thijs R A Vandenbroucke, David Nogues-Bravo, et al.
Annual Review of Marine Science|September 8, 2023
Using the Fossil Record to Understand Extinction Risk and Inform Marine Conservation in a Changing WorldSeth Finnegan, Paul G Harnik, Rowan Lockwood, et al.
Proceedings. Biological Sciences|April 16, 2025
A nineteenth- and twentieth-century reproductive regime shift in benthic foraminifera from the Santa Barbara Basin, CaliforniaSara Segura Kahanamoku-Meyer, Maya Samuels-Fair, Jared Richards, et al.
Biorxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology|May 7, 2026
Nineteenth-century emergence of a seafloor ecosystem beyond late Quaternary limitsSara S Kahanamoku, Ivo A P Duijnstee, Ingrid L Hendy, et al.
Science (New York, N.Y.)|January 15, 2026
Paleogeography modulates marine extinction risk throughout the PhanerozoicCooper M Malanoski, Seth Finnegan, Edward C Huang, et al.
Scientific Data|January 10, 2018
Twelve thousand recent patellogastropods from a northeastern Pacific latitudinal gradientSara S Kahanamoku, Pincelli M Hull, David R Lindberg, et al.
Science Advances|August 30, 2023
Why the Early Paleozoic was intrinsically prone to marine extinctionAlexandre Pohl, Richard G Stockey, Xu Dai, et al.
Pageof 4

Showing results (11-20 of 34) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 4
Science (New York, N.Y.)|August 3, 2013
Climate change and the past, present, and future of biotic interactionsJessica L Blois, Phoebe L Zarnetske, Matthew C Fitzpatrick, et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|April 19, 2012
Climate change and the selective signature of the Late Ordovician mass extinctionSeth Finnegan, Noel A Heim, Shanan E Peters, et al.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|October 5, 2021
Decreasing Phanerozoic extinction intensity as a consequence of Earth surface oxygenation and metazoan ecophysiologyRichard G Stockey, Alexandre Pohl, Andy Ridgwell, et al.
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|May 14, 2023
Was the Late Ordovician mass extinction truly exceptional?Christian M Ø Rasmussen, Thijs R A Vandenbroucke, David Nogues-Bravo, et al.
Annual Review of Marine Science|September 8, 2023
Using the Fossil Record to Understand Extinction Risk and Inform Marine Conservation in a Changing WorldSeth Finnegan, Paul G Harnik, Rowan Lockwood, et al.
Proceedings. Biological Sciences|April 16, 2025
A nineteenth- and twentieth-century reproductive regime shift in benthic foraminifera from the Santa Barbara Basin, CaliforniaSara Segura Kahanamoku-Meyer, Maya Samuels-Fair, Jared Richards, et al.
Biorxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology|May 7, 2026
Nineteenth-century emergence of a seafloor ecosystem beyond late Quaternary limitsSara S Kahanamoku, Ivo A P Duijnstee, Ingrid L Hendy, et al.
Science (New York, N.Y.)|January 15, 2026
Paleogeography modulates marine extinction risk throughout the PhanerozoicCooper M Malanoski, Seth Finnegan, Edward C Huang, et al.
Scientific Data|January 10, 2018
Twelve thousand recent patellogastropods from a northeastern Pacific latitudinal gradientSara S Kahanamoku, Pincelli M Hull, David R Lindberg, et al.
Science Advances|August 30, 2023
Why the Early Paleozoic was intrinsically prone to marine extinctionAlexandre Pohl, Richard G Stockey, Xu Dai, et al.
Pageof 4