Search results for "EVOLUTIONARY SYNTHESIS"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Adaptive radiation in the fossil record: a case study among Jurassic ammonoids

2013

15 pages; International audience; Evolutionary radiations have been extensively studied especially in the fossil record and in the context of postcrisis recoveries. The concept of adaptive radiation that emerges from this very broad topic explicitly involves the effect of adaptation driven by ecological opportunity and is considered to be of the foremost importance. It is essential to be able to detect adaptive radiation because it points up factors that predispose a clade to radiate. Adaptive radiation has received much attention in recent decades based mostly on studies dealing with recent clades, but data from the fossil record are still scarce. This study begins to fill this gap with th…

0106 biological sciencesmacroevolution010506 paleontologyFossil RecordModern evolutionary synthesisPaleontologyContext (language use)JurassicBiologyMacroevolution010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPaleontologyammonoidsAdaptive radiationAdaptation[SDU.STU.PG]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontologyadaptive radiationCladeEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPalaeontology
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MILES extended: Stellar population synthesis models from the optical to the infrared

2016

We present the first single-burst stellar population models which covers the optical and the infrared wavelength range between 3500 and 50000 Angstrom and which are exclusively based on empirical stellar spectra. To obtain these joint models, we combined the extended MILES models in the optical with our new infrared models that are based on the IRTF (Infrared Telescope Facility) library. The latter are available only for a limited range in terms of both age and metallicity. Our combined single-burst stellar population models were calculated for ages larger than 1 Gyr, for metallicities between [Fe/H] = -0.40 and 0.26, for initial mass functions of various types and slopes, and on the basis …

CAII TRIPLETStellar populationInfraredMetallicityINITIAL MASS FUNCTIONBROWN DWARFSInfrared telescopeFOS: Physical sciencesAstrophysicsAstrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics01 natural sciencesAstronomical spectroscopyinfrared: galaxiesATMOSPHERIC PARAMETERS0103 physical sciencesRange (statistics)Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics2.5 MU-MGIANT BRANCH STARS010303 astronomy & astrophysicsinfrared: starsEMPIRICAL CALIBRATIONAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsPhysics010308 nuclear & particles physicsNear-infrared spectroscopyHIGH-SPECTRAL-RESOLUTIONAstronomy and AstrophysicsEVOLUTIONARY SYNTHESISAstrophysics - Astrophysics of GalaxiesGalaxySpace and Planetary ScienceAstrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA)NEWTON-TELESCOPE LIBRARYgalaxies: stellar contentAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics
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The logic of forms in the light of developmental biology and palaeontology.

2010

11 pages; If you ask palaeontologists, and indeed anyone interested in the theory of evolution, for the key words that encapsulate it, you will obtain the following results: adaptation, natural selection, speciation, but also ontogeny and phylogeny. The first three key words apply to the future of the individual and by extension to the future of the species: we are therefore dealing with adults of a reproductive age. The two other key words concern (i) the evolution of the morphology from the egg to the adult (individual ontogeny: short timescale) and especially what goes on in the black box called embryogenesis, and (ii) the modification of ontogenetic sequences over time, resulting in cha…

Natural selectionExtension (metaphysics)Body plan[ SDV.BID.EVO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]Modern evolutionary synthesisEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsOntogenyMorphology (biology)BiologyAdaptation[ SDU.STU.PG ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Paleontology
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Analogia e omologia: la questione della filogenesi delle emozioni

2013

Aim of this paper is to outline a new evolutionary interpretation of aesthetic emotions, in the light of the most recent developments in Evolutionary Biology, in particular the so-called “Extended Synthesis of Evolution” (Pigliucci-Müller 2010). Focussing on the biological concept of homology, the Author argues that, in order to effectively understand role and evolutionary value of aesthetic emotions, it should be asked not “what aesthetic emotions are for?”, rather “what kind of constraints and homologies influence the specific “shape” of human aesthetic emotions?”. In a few words, we should move from a functionalist approach to human aesthetic emotions towards a morphological one.

lcsh:Language and Literaturelcsh:BH1-301morphologySettore M-FIL/04 - Esteticafunctionalismlcsh:Phomologyestetica evoluzionismoevolutionary aestheticsextended evolutionary synthesislcsh:Aesthetics
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