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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-007.mrc:192622923:5364
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-007.mrc:192622923:5364?format=raw

LEADER: 05364mam a22004214a 4500
001 3167293
005 20221019235903.0
008 010403t20012001pauab b 000 0 eng
010 $a 2001031157
020 $a9058093492
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm46685099
035 $9AUA7940CU
035 $a(NNC)3167293
035 $a3167293
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dC#P$dOrLoB-B
042 $apcc
043 $aas-----$au------
050 00 $aQL754$b.F38 2001
082 00 $a591.56/8/0959$221
245 00 $aFaunal and floral migrations and evolution in SE Asia-Australasia /$cIan Metcalfe [and others].
260 $aLisse ;$aExton, (PA) :$bA.A. Balkema Publishers,$c[2001], ©2001.
300 $a416 pages :$billustrations, maps ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 00 $tPreface /$rPenny van Oosterzee --$tIntroduction /$rI. Metcalfe, J. M. B. Smith and M. Morwood /$r[et al.] --$gSect. 1.$tPalaeogeographic Background.$tPalaeozoic and Mesozoic tectonic evolution and biogeography of SE Asia-Australasia /$rIan Metcalfe.$tCenozoic reconstructions of SE Asia and the SW Pacific: changing patterns of land and sea /$rRobert Hall --$gSect. 2.$tPalaeozoic and Mesozoic geology and biogeography.$tCambrian to Permian conodont biogeography in East Asia-Australasia /$rRobert S. Nicoll and Ian Metcalfe.$tWallace Lines in eastern Gondwana: Palaeobiogeography of Australasian Permian Brachiopoda /$rN. W. Archbold.$tA review of the Early Permian flora from Papua (West New Guinea) /$rJ. F. Rigby.$tA biogeographic comparison of the dinosaurs and associated vertebrate faunas from the Mesozoic of Australia and Southeast Asia /$rJohn A. Long and Eric Buffetaut.
505 80 $tEarly Middle Jurassic (Aalenian) radiolarian fauna from the Xialu chert in the Yarlung Zangbo Suture Zone, southern Tibet /$rAtsushi Matsuoka, Kenta Kobayashi and Toru Nagahashi /$r[et al.] --$gSect. 3.$tWallace's Line.$tWhy Wallace drew the line: A re-analysis of Wallace's bird collections in the Malay Archipelago and the origins of biogeography /$rDanielle Clode and Rory O'Brien.$tThe linear approach to biogeography: Should we erase Wallace's Line? /$rWalter R. Erdelen.$tFaunal exchange between Asia and Australia in the Tertiary as evidenced by recent butterflies /$rRienk de Jong.$tWhy does the distribution of the Honeyeaters (Meliphagidae) conform so well to Wallace's Line? /$rHugh A. Ford.$tHuman influences on vertebrate zoogeography: animal translocation and biological invasions across and to the east of Wallace's Line /$rTom Heinsohn.$tWallace's line and marine organisms: the distribution of staghorn corals (Acropora) in Indonesia /$rCarden C. Wallace --$gSect. 4.$tPlant biogeography and evolution.
505 80 $tWhy are there so many Primitive Angiosperms in the Rain Forests of Asia-Australasia? /$rR. J. Morley.$tAustralian Paleogene vegetation and environments: evidence for palaeo-Gondwanan elements in the fossil records of Lauraceae and Proteaceae /$rAnthony J. Vadala and David R. Greenwood.$tVegetation and climate in lowland Southeast Asia at the Last Glacial Maximum /$rA. Peter Kershaw, Dan Penny and Sander van der Kaars /$r[et al.].$tThe restiads invade the north: the diaspora of the Restionaceae /$rBarbara G. Briggs.$tEvolutionary history of Alectryon in Australia /$rKaren J. Edwards and Paul A. Gadek --$gSect. 5.$tNon Primates.$tAustralasian distributions in Trichoptera (Insecta) - a frequent pattern or a rare case? /$rWolfram Mey.$tButterflies and Wallace's Line: faunistic patterns and explanatory hypotheses within the south-east Asian butterflies /$rR. L. Kitching, R. Eastwood and K. Hurley.
505 80 $tThe vertebrate fauna of the Wallacean Island Interchange Zone: the basis of the inbalance and impoverishment /$rAllen Keast.$tDispersal versus vicariance, artifice rather than contest /$rB. Michaux.$tThe Australian rodent fauna, flotilla's, flotsam or just fleet footed? /$rH. Godthelp.$tCorroboration of the Garden of Eden Hypothesis /$rThomas H. Rich, Timothy F. Flannery and Peter Trusler /$r[et al.].$tMammals in Sulawesi: where did they come from the when, and what happened to them when they got there? /$rColin Groves --$gSect. 6.$tPrimates.$tRadiation and Evolution of Three Macaque Species, Macaca fascicularis, M. radiata and M. sinica, as Related to the Geographic Changes in the Pleistocene of Southeast Asia /$rR.-L. Pan and C. E. Oxnard.$tBorneo as a biogeographic barrier to Asian-Australasian migration /$rDouglas Brandon-Jones.$tModelling divergence, Inter-breeding and Migration: Species Evolution in a Changing World /$rCharles Oxnard and Ken Wessen.
505 80 $tEarly hominid occupation of Flores, East Indonesia, and its wider significance /$rMike Morwood.$tThe requirements for human colonisation of Australia /$rIain Davidson.$tDid early hominids cross sea gaps on natural rafts? /$rJ. M. B. Smith.
650 0 $aAnimal migration$zSoutheast Asia.
650 0 $aPlants$xMigration$zSoutheast Asia.
650 0 $aEvolution (Biology)$zSoutheast Asia.
650 0 $aAnimal migration$zAustralasia.
650 0 $aPlants$xMigration$zAustralasia.
650 0 $aEvolution (Biology)$zAustralasia.
700 1 $aMetcalfe, Ian,$d1949-$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n97101322
852 00 $boff,bio$hQL754$i.F38 2001