- Paleobiology
Paleobiology (sometimes spelled palaeobiology) is a growing and comparatively new discipline which combines the methods and findings of the
natural science biology with the methods and findings of theearth science paleontology . It is occasionally referred to as "geobiology ."Paleobiological
research usesbiological field research of "current"biota and offossil s "millions of years" old to answer questions about themolecular evolution and theevolutionary history of life . In thisscientific quest,macrofossil s,microfossil s andtrace fossil s are typically analyzed. However, the 21st-centurybiochemical analysis ofDNA andRNA samples offers much promise, as does thebiometric construction ofphylogenetic tree s.An investigator in this field is known as a "paleobiologist".
Important research areas
*
Paleobotany applies the principles and methods of paleobiology toflora , especially green land plants, but also including the fungi andseaweed s (algae ). See alsomycology ,phycology anddendrochronology .*
Paleozoology uses the methods and principles of paleobiology to understandfauna , both vertebrates andinvertebrate s. See also vertebrate andinvertebrate paleontology , as well aspaleoanthropology .*
Micropaleontology applies paleobiologic principles and methods toarchaea ,bacteria , protists and microscopicpollen /spore s. See alsomicrofossil s andpalynology .*Paleobiochemistry uses the methods and principles of
organic chemistry to detect and analyze molecular-level evidence of ancient life, bothmicroscopic andmacroscopic .*
Paleoecology examines pastecosystem s, climates, and geographies so as to better comprehend prehistoric life.*Paleotaphonomy analyzes the
post-mortem history (for example,decay anddecomposition ) of an individual organism in order to gain insight on the behavior,death and environment of the fossilized organism.*Paleoichnology analyzes the tracks, borings, trails,
burrow s, impressions, and othertrace fossil s left by ancient organisms in order to gain insight into their behavior andecology .*Stratigraphic paleobiology studies long-term secular changes, as well as the (short-term) bed-by-bed sequence of changes, in organismal characteristics and behaviors. See also
stratification ,sedimentary rock s and thegeologic time scale .*Evolutionary developmental paleobiology examines the
evolution ary aspects of the modes and trajectories of growth and development in the evolution of life --clade s bothextinct and extant. See alsoadaptive radiation ,cladistics ,evolutionary biology ,developmental biology andphylogenetic tree .Paleobiologists
The founder or "father" of modern paleobiology is said to be Baron Franz Nopcsa (1877 to 1933), a turn-of-the-century
Balkan scientist. He is also known as "Baron Nopcsa", "Ferenc Nopcsa", and "Franz Nopcsa von Felsö-Szilvás". He initially termed the discipline "paleophysiology."However, credit for coining the word "paleobiology" itself should go to Professor
Charles Schuchert . He proposed the term in 1904 so as to initiate "a broad new science" joining "traditional paleontology with the evidence and insights of geology and isotopic chemistry." [ Schuchert is cited on page 170 of "Cradle of Life: The Discovery of Earth's Earliest Fossils" (Princeton:Princeton University Press ) byJ. William Schopf (1999). ISBN 0-691-00230-4. ]On the other hand,
Charles Doolittle Walcott , aSmithsonian adventurer, has been cited as the "founder ofPrecambrian paleobiology." Although best-known as the discoverer of the mid-Cambrian Burgess shale animal fossils, in 1883 this American curator found the "first Precambrian fossil cells known to science" -- astromatolite reef then known as "Cryptozoon"algae . In 1899 he discovered the firstacritarch fossil cells, a Precambrianalga lphytoplankton he named "Chuaria". Lastly, in 1914, Walcott reported "minute cells and chains of cell-like bodies" belonging to Precambrianpurple bacteria . [ Walcott's contributions are described by J. William Schopf (1999) on pages 23 to 31. Another good source is E. L. Yochelson (1997), "Charles Doolittle Walcott: Paleontologist" (Kent, Ohio:Kent State University Press ). ]Later 20th-century paleobiologists have also figured prominently in finding
Archaean andProterozoic eonmicrofossil s: In 1954,Stanley A. Tyler and Elso S. Barghoorn described 2.1 billion-year-oldcyanobacteria andfungi -likemicroflora at theirGunflint Chert fossil site. Eleven years later, Barghoorn andJ. William Schopf reported finely-preserved Precambrian microflora at their Bitter Springs site of theAmadeus Basin , Central Australia. [ The paleobiologic discoveries of Tyler, Barghoorn and Schopf are related on pages 35 to 70 of Schopf (1999). ]Finally, in 1993, Schopf discovered O2-producing
blue-green bacteria at his 3.5 billion-year-oldApex Chert site inPilbara Craton ,Marble Bar , in the northwestern part ofWestern Australia . So paleobiologists were at last homing in on the origins of the Precambrian "Oxygen catastrophe ." [ The Apex chert microflora is related by Schopf (1999) himself on pages 71 to 100. ]Paleobiologic journals
* "
Biology and Geology "
* "Historical Biology "
* "Palaios "
* "Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology "
* "Paleobiology"
* "Paleooceanography "Footnotes
See also
*
History of biology
*History of paleontology
*History of invertebrate paleozoology Bibliography
* Derek E.G. Briggs and Peter R. Crowther, eds. (2003). "Palaeobiology II". Malden, Massachusetts:
Blackwell Publishing . ISBN 0-632-05147-7 and ISBN 0-632-05149-3. The second edition of an acclaimed British textbook.*
Robert L. Carroll (1998). "Patterns and Processes of Vertebrate Evolution". Cambridge Paleobiology Series. Cambridge, England:Cambridge University Press . ISBN 9788521478090 and ISBN 052147809X. Applies paleobiology to the adaptive radiation offish es andquadraped s.* Matthew T. Carrano, Timothy Gaudin, Richard Blob, and John Wible, eds. (2006). "Amniote Paleobiology: Perspectives on the Evolution of Mammals, Birds and Reptiles". Chicago:
University of Chicago Press . ISBN 0226094782 and ISBN 978-0226094786. This new book describes paleobiological research into land vertebrates of theMesozoic andCenozoic eras.* Robert B. Eckhardt (2000). "Human Paleobiology". Cambridge Studies in Biology and Evolutionary Anthropology. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521451604 and ISBN 9780521451604. This book connects paleoanthropology and
archeology to the field of paleobiology.* Douglas H. Erwin (2006). "Extinction: How Life on Earth Nearly Ended 250 Million Years Ago." Princeton:
Princeton University Press . ISBN 978-0-691-00524-9. An investigation by a paleobiologist into the many theories as to what happened during the catastrophic Permian-Triassic transition.* Brian Keith Hall and Wendy M. Olson, eds. (2003). "Keywords and Concepts in Evolutionary Biology". Cambridge, Massachusetts:
Harvard University Press . ISBN 0674009045 and ISBN 9780674009042.*
David Jablonski , Douglas H. Erwin, andJere H. Lipps (1996). "Evolutionary Paleobiology". Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 492 pages. ISBN 0226389111 and ISBN 0226389138. A fine American textbook.*
Masatoshi Nei and Sudhir Kumar (2000). "Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetics". Oxford, England:Oxford University Press . ISBN 0195135857 and ISBN 978-0195-135855. This text links DNA/RNA analysis to the evolutionary "tree of life" in paleobiology.* Donald R. Prothero (2004). "Bringing Fossils to Life: An Introduction to Paleobiology". New York:
McGraw Hill . ISBN 0073661708 and ISBN 978-007366-1704. An acclaimed book for the novice fossil-hunter and young adults.*
Mark Ridley , ed. (2004). "Evolution." Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199267944 and ISBN 9781-405-103459. An anthology of analytical studies in paleobiology.*
Raymond Rogers , David Eberth, and Tony Fiorillo (2007). "Bonebeds: Genesis, Analysis and Paleobiological Significance". Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226723704 and ISBN 9780226723709. A new book regarding the fossils of vertebrates, especiallytetrapod s on land during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras.*
Thomas J. M. Schopf , ed. (1972). "Models in Paleobiology". San Francisco: Freeman, Cooper. ISBN 0877353256 and ISBN 978-0877353256. A much-cited, seminal classic in the field discussingmethodology andquantitative analysis .* Thomas J.M. Schopf (1980). "Paleoceanography". Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674652150 and ISBN 9780674652156. A later book by the noted paleobiologist. This text discusses ancient marine ecology.
* J. William Schopf (2001). "Cradle of Life: The Discovery of Earth's Earliest Fossils". Princeton:
Princeton University Press . ISBN 0691088640. The use of biochemical and ultramicroscopic analysis to analyze microfossils of bacteria and archaea.* Paul Selden and John Nudds (2005). "Evolution of Fossil Ecosystems". Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-02267-46418 and ISBN 022-6746410. A recent analysis and discussion of
paleoecology .* Paul Tasch (1980). "Paleobiology of the Invertebrates". New York:
Wiley . ISBN 0471-052728 and ISBN 9780471-052722. Appliesstatistics to the evolution ofsponge s,cnidaria ns,worm s,brachiopod s,bryozoa ,mollusk s, andarthropod s.* Shuhai Xiao and Alan J. Kaufman, eds. (2006). "Neoproterozoic Geobiology and Paleobiology". New York:
Springer Science+Business Media . ISBN 978-1-4020-5201-9. This new book describes research into thefossils of the earliest multicellular animals and plants, especially theEdiacaran period invertebrates and algae.* Bernard Ziegler and R. O. Muir (1983). "Introduction to Palaeobiology". Chichester, England: E. Horwood. ISBN 0470275529 and ISBN 9780470275528. A classic, British introductory textbook.
External links
* [http://www.nmnh.si.edu/paleo/geotime Paleobiology website of the National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian) in Washington, D.C.]
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