Abstract The Ordovician Period records an extraordinary biodiversity increase known as the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE), which coincided with a series of …
The Ordovician biodiversification has been recognized since the 1960s; the term 'The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event', abbreviated by many as the 'GOBE', has been used for …
The greatest relative changes in marine biodiversity accumulation occurred during the Early Paleozoic. The precision of temporal constraints on these changes is crude, hampering our …
J Rong, DAT Harper, B Huang, R Li, X Zhang… - Earth-Science …, 2020 - Elsevier
The temporal and spatial distribution of Hirnantian brachiopod faunas are reviewed based on a new, comprehensive dataset from over 20 palaeoplates and terranes, a revised …
The largest radiation of Phanerozoic marine animal life quadrupled genus-level diversity towards the end of the Ordovician Period about 450 million years ago. A leading hypothesis …
In all reconstructions published during the last two decades, the Austroalpine and the correlative Southalpine basement units of the Eastern Alps were considered to represent a …
Abstract The Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE) was the most rapid and sustained increase in marine Phanerozoic biodiversity. What generated this biotic response …
CR Scotese, C Vérard, L Burgener… - Geological Society …, 2025 - lyellcollection.org
The tectonics, geography and climate of the Cretaceous world were very different from the modern world. At the start of the Cretaceous, the supercontinent of Pangaea had just begun …
G Wang, R Zhan, IG Percival - Earth-Science Reviews, 2019 - Elsevier
The end-Ordovician mass extinction (EOME) is widely interpreted as consisting of two pulses associated with the onset and demise of the Gondwana glaciation, respectively, with …