Jason Loxton: Passionate about Paleontology (Cape Breton University)

Edit Public Technologies 12 Aug 2016
(Source. Cape Breton University). Originally an arts student, Jason Loxton can't pinpoint the moment that turned him toward a career in paleontology ... 'I started off doing history and philosophy of science, but got bitten by the paleo bug along the way ... That led to a PhD program, and the rest is history,' says Jason ... Jason studies a group of zooplankton called graptolites ... As specialists, we all go to different conferences most of the time....

For ancient deep-sea plankton, a long decline before extinction (University at Buffalo, State University of New York)

Edit Public Technologies 19 Jul 2016
A slab of rock from a study site in Nevada harbors many specimens of Metabolograptus extraordinarius, a shallow-water graptolite species, which together with some close relatives, replaced all the formerly dominant species following the end-Ordovician mass extinction ... The research, published July 18 in the Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, focused on large zooplankton called graptolites....

For ancient deep-sea plankton, a long decline before extinction (Canisius College)

Edit Public Technologies 19 Jul 2016
The research, published in the Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, focused on large zooplankton called graptolites ... This might be the conclusion you'd draw if you examined only whether different species of graptolites were present in the fossil record in the years immediately preceding and following the Ordovician extinction....

Age-dependent extinction in ancient plankton [Evolution]>

Edit PNAS 09 Feb 2016
Two distinct regimes of extinction dynamic are present in the major marine zooplankton group, the graptolites, during the Ordovician and Silurian periods (486−418 Ma). In conditions of “background” extinction, which dominated in the Ordovician, taxonomic evolutionary rates were relatively low and the probability of extinction was highest among newly evolved... ....

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Age-dependent extinction in ancient plankton [Evolution]>

Edit PNAS 09 Feb 2016
Two distinct regimes of extinction dynamic are present in the major marine zooplankton group, the graptolites, during the Ordovician and Silurian periods (486−418 Ma). In conditions of “background” extinction, which dominated in the Ordovician, taxonomic evolutionary rates were relatively low and the probability of extinction was highest among newly evolved... ....

Survival of the oldest (Victoria University of Wellington)

Edit Public Technologies 29 Jan 2016
Professor James Crampton, from Victoria's School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences, along with Dr Roger Cooper, Emeritus Research Scientist at GNS Science, used computer-optimised analysis to examine the exact time of origination and extinction of graptolites-an extinct group of ancient marine animal that lived over 400 million years ago....

George Monbiot meets David Attenborough: ‘You feel apprehensive for the future, of course you do’

Edit The Guardian 22 Jan 2016
@GeorgeMonbiot. You cannot meet David Attenborough without reflecting on the lottery of life ... He is sound in wind and limb, vision and hearing, his eyes sparkle, his face is scarcely rumpled by time ... what about all those graptolites – what if they were luminous? In which case, now you suddenly realise that trilobites have bloody good eyes, so maybe they were there too! Wow!” (Graptolites and trilobites are long-extinct marine animals) ... ....

Greenhouse−icehouse transition in the Late Ordovician marks a step change in extinction regime in the marine plankton

Edit PNAS 20 Jan 2016
Abstract. Two distinct regimes of extinction dynamic are present in the major marine zooplankton group, the graptolites, during the Ordovician and Silurian periods (486−418 Ma) ... This change coincides with a change in global climate, from greenhouse to icehouse conditions ... ....

Teacher-curated fossil museum awaits visitors

Edit Taipei Times 20 Dec 2015
Biology teacher Yang Ching-hung (楊慶鴻), whose collection is being exhibited at the museum, said he decided to start collecting fossils after what he called an embarrassing incident 10 years ago, when he could not tell the difference between ortheceras and graptolite fossils that a student showed him ... Yang said he asked the school administration if it could provide him room for a museum, and it agreed ... ....
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