Schopf J.W., Kudryavtsev A.B., Walter M.R., Kranendonk M.J.V., Williford K.H., Kozdon R., Valley J.W., Gallardo V.A., Espinosa C., Flannery D.T. Sulfur-cycling fossil bacteria from the 1.8-Ga Duck Creek Formation provide promising evidence of evolution’s null hypothesis // PNAS. 2015. V. 112, № 7. P. 2087–2092.
Schweitzer M.H., Horner J.R. Intravascular microstructures in trabecular bone tissues of Tyrannosaurus rex // Annales de Paleontologie. 1999. V. 85. № 3. P. 179–192.
Schweitzer M.H., Marshall M., Carron K., Bohle S., Busse S.C., Arnold E.V., Barnard D., Horner J.R., Starkey J.R. Heme compounds in dinosaur trabecular bone // Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 1997. V. 94. № 12. P. 6291–6296.
Schweitzer M.H., Suo Z., Avci R., Asara J.M., Allen M.A., Arce F.T., Horner J.R. Analyses of soft tissue from Tyrannosaurus rex suggest the presence of protein // Science. 2007. V. 316. № 5822. P. 277–280.
Schweitzer M.H., Wittmeyer J.L., Horner J.R. (б) Gender-specific reproductive tissue in ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex // Science. 2005. V. 308. № 5727. P. 1456–1460.
Schweitzer M.H., Wittmeyer J.L., Horner J.R., Toporski J.K. (а) Soft-Tissue Vessels and Cellular Preservation in Tyrannosaurus rex // Science. 2005. V. 307. № 5717. P. 1952–1955.
Schweitzer M.H., Zheng W., Cleland T.P., Bern M. Molecular analyses of dinosaur osteocytes support the presence of endogenous molecules // Bone. 2013. V. 52. № 1. P. 414–423.
Schweitzer M.H., Zheng W., Organ C.L., Avci R., Suo Z., Freimark L.M., Lebleu V.S., Duncan M.D., Vander Heiden M.G., Neveu J.M., Lane W.S., Cottrell J.S., Horner J.R., Cantley L.C., Kalluri R., Asara J.M. Biomolecular characterization and protein sequences of the campanian hadrosaur B. canadensis // Science. 2009. V. 324. № 5927. P. 626–631.
Seeley R.H. Intense natural selection caused a rapid morphological transition in a living marine snail // Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1986. V. 83. P. 6897–6901.
Sergievski S.O., Granovitch A.I., Sokolova I.M. Long-term studies of Littorina obtusata and Littorina saxatilis populations in the White Sea // Oceanologica Acta. 1997. V. 20. № 1. P. 259–265.
Shapiro R. Prebiotic cytosine synthesis: a critical analysis and implications for the origin of life // Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 1999. V. 96. P. 4396–4401.
Sherman M.Y. Universal genome in the origin of Metazoa: thoughts about evolution // Cell Cycle. 2007. V. 6. № 15. P. 1873–1877.
Shervis L.J., Boosh G.M., Koval C.F. Infestation of sour cherries by the apple maggot: confirmation of a previously uncertain host status // Journal of Economic Entomology. 1970. V. 63. № 1. P. 294–295.
Shilton C.M., Brown G.P., Benedict S., Shine R. Spinal arthropathy associated with Ochrobactrum anthropi in free-ranging cane toads (Chaunus [Bufo] marinus) in Australia // Veterinary Pathology. 2008. V. 45. P. 85–94.
Shine R., Brown G.P., Phillips B.L. (a) An evolutionary process that assembles phenotypes through space rather than time // PNAS. 2011. V. 108. № 14. P. 5708–5711.
Shine R., Brown G.P., Phillips B.L. (b) Spatial sorting, assortative mating, and natural selection // PNAS. 2011. V. 108. № 31. P. E348.
Simmons R.E., Scheepers L. Winning by a neck: sexual selection in the evolution of giraffe // The American Naturalist. 1996. V. 148. № 5. P. 771–786.
Smejkal G.B., Schweitzer M.H. Will current technologies enable dinosaur proteomics? // Expert Rev. Proteomics. 2007. V. 4. № 6. P. 695–699.
Sodera V. One small speck to man: the evolution myth. Vija Sodera Productions. 2009. – 560 p.
Soltis P.S., Soltis D.E., Smiley G.J. An rbcL sequence from a Miocene Taxodium (bald cypress) // Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 1992. V. 89. P. 449–451.
Spirin A.S. When, where, and in what environment could the RNA world appear and evolve? // Paleontological Journal. 2007. V. 41. № 5. P. 481–488.
Stahle D.W., Burnette D.J, Villanueva J., Cerano J., Fye F.K., Griffin R.D., Cleaveland M.K., Stahle D.K., Edmondson J.R. Wolff K.P. Tree-ring analysis of ancient baldcypress trees and subfossil wood // Quaternary Science Reviews. 2012. V. 34. P. 1–15.
Stambaugh M.C., Guyette R.P. Progress in constructing a long oak chronology from the central United States // Tree-Ring Research. 2009. V. 65. P. 147–156.
Sutherland J.D. Ribonucleotides // Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology. 2010. V. 2. P. a005439.
Swallow J.S., Carter P.A., Garland T.Jr. Arttificial selection for increased wheel-running behavior in house mice // Behav Genet. 1998. V. 28. № 3. P. 227–237.
Schwartz A.W. Evaluating the plausibility of prebiotic multistage syntheses // Astrobiology. 2013. V. 13. № 8. P. 784–789.
Takahashi M., Arita H., Hiraiwa-Hasegawa M., Hasegawa T. Peahens do not prefer peacocks with more elaborate trains // Animal Behaviour. 2008. V. 75. № 4. P. 1209–1219.
Tanaka G., Hou X., Ma X., Edgecombe G.D., Strausfeld N.J. Chelicerate neural ground pattern in a Cambrian great appendage arthropod // Nature. 2013. V. 502. P. 364–367.
Tinghitella R.M., Zuk M., Beveridge M., Simmons L.W. Island hopping introduces Polynesian field crickets to novel environments, genetic bottlenecks and rapid evolution // Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 2011. V. 24. P. 1199–1211.
Trussell G.C., Nicklin M.O. Cue sensitivity, inducible defense, and trade-offs in a marine snail // Ecology. 2002. V. 83. P. 1635–1647.
Udintsev G.B. Equatorial Segment of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge: initial results of the geological and geophysical investigations under the EQUARIDGE Program, cruises of R/V 'Akademik Nikolaj Strakhov' in 1987, 1990, 1991. Unesco, 1996. 122 p.
Verheyen E., Salzburger W., Snoeks J., Meyer A. Origin of the superflock of cichlid fishes from lake Victoria, East Africa // Science. 2003. V. 300. № 5617. P. 325–329.
Vervust B., Grbac I., Van Damme R. Differences in morphology, performance and behaviour between recently diverged populations of Podarcis sicula mirror differences in predation pressure // Oikos. 2007. V. 116. № 8. P. 1343–1352.
Vreeland R.H., Rosenzweig W.D., Powers D.W. Isolation of a 250 million-year-old halotolerant bacterium from a primary salt crystal // Nature. 2000. V. 407, P. 897–900.
Weiner S., Lowenstam H.A., Hood L. Characterization of 80-million-year-old mollusk shell proteins // Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 1976, V. 73. № 8. P. 2541–2545.
Weinreich D.M., Delaney N.F., DePristo M.A., Hartl D.L. Darwinian evolution can follow only very few mutational paths to fitter proteins // Science. 2006. V. 312. P. 111–114.
Westbroek P., van der Meide P.H., van der Wey-Kloppers, van der Sluis R.J., de Leeuw J.W., de Jong E.W. Fossil macromolecules cephalopod shells: characterization, immunological response and diagenesis // Paleobiology. 1979. V. 5. № 2. P. 151–167.
White A.W., Shine R. The extra-limital spread of an invasive species via ‘stowaway’ dispersal: toad to nowhere? // Animal Conservation. 2009. V. 12. P. 38–45.
Wilkinson G.S., Reillo P.R. Female choice response to artificial selection on an exaggerated male trait in a stalk-eyed fly // Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B. 1994. V. 255. P. 1–6.
Williams G.A. The comparative ecology of the flat periwinkles, Littorina obtusata (L.) and L. marinae Sacchi et Rastelli // Field Studies. 1990. V. 7. № 3. P. 469–482.
Wilson A.M., Lowe J.C., Roskilly K., Hudson P.E., Golabek K.A., McNutt J.W. Locomotion dynamics of hunting in wild cheetahs // Nature. 2013. V. 498. P. 185–189.
Читать дальше
Конец ознакомительного отрывка
Купить книгу