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Best practices for justifying fossil calibrations.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Parham, James F 
Donoghue, Philip CJ 
Bell, Christopher J 
Calway, Tyler D 
Head, Jason J 

Abstract

Our ability to correlate biological evolution with climate change, geological evolution, and other historical patterns is essential to understanding the processes that shape biodiversity. Combining data from the fossil record with molecular phylogenetics represents an exciting synthetic approach to this challenge. The first molecular divergence dating analysis (Zuckerkandl and Pauling 1962) was based on a measure of the amino acid differences in the hemoglobin molecule, with replacement rates established (calibrated) using paleontological age estimates from textbooks (e.g., Dodson 1960). Since that time, the amount of molecular sequence data has increased dramatically, affording ever-greater opportunities to apply molecular divergence approaches to fundamental problems in evolutionary biology.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Calibration, Classification, Fossils, Phylogeny

Journal Title

Syst Biol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1063-5157
1076-836X

Volume Title

61

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)