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Biological extinction in earth history.
Science. 1986 Mar 28; 231:1528-33.Sci

Abstract

Virtually all plant and animal species that have ever lived on the earth are extinct. For this reason alone, extinction must play an important role in the evolution of life. The five largest mass extinctions of the past 600 million years are of greatest interest, but there is also a spectrum of smaller events, many of which indicate biological systems in profound stress. Extinction may be episodic at all scales, with relatively long periods of stability alternating with short-lived extinction events. Most extinction episodes are biologically selective, and further analysis of the victims and survivors offers the greatest chance of deducing the proximal causes of extinction. A drop in sea level and climatic change are most frequently invoked to explain mass extinctions, but new theories of collisions with extraterrestrial bodies are gaining favor. Extinction may be constructive in a Darwinian sense or it may only perturb the system by eliminating those organisms that happen to be susceptible to geologically rare stresses.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of the Geophysical Sciences, University of Chicago, IL 60637, USA.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

11542058

Citation

Raup, D M.. "Biological Extinction in Earth History." Science (New York, N.Y.), vol. 231, 1986, pp. 1528-33.
Raup DM. Biological extinction in earth history. Science. 1986;231:1528-33.
Raup, D. M. (1986). Biological extinction in earth history. Science (New York, N.Y.), 231, 1528-33.
Raup DM. Biological Extinction in Earth History. Science. 1986 Mar 28;231:1528-33. PubMed PMID: 11542058.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Biological extinction in earth history. A1 - Raup,D M, PY - 1986/3/28/pubmed PY - 2001/9/11/medline PY - 1986/3/28/entrez KW - NASA Discipline Exobiology KW - Non-NASA Center SP - 1528 EP - 33 JF - Science (New York, N.Y.) JO - Science VL - 231 N2 - Virtually all plant and animal species that have ever lived on the earth are extinct. For this reason alone, extinction must play an important role in the evolution of life. The five largest mass extinctions of the past 600 million years are of greatest interest, but there is also a spectrum of smaller events, many of which indicate biological systems in profound stress. Extinction may be episodic at all scales, with relatively long periods of stability alternating with short-lived extinction events. Most extinction episodes are biologically selective, and further analysis of the victims and survivors offers the greatest chance of deducing the proximal causes of extinction. A drop in sea level and climatic change are most frequently invoked to explain mass extinctions, but new theories of collisions with extraterrestrial bodies are gaining favor. Extinction may be constructive in a Darwinian sense or it may only perturb the system by eliminating those organisms that happen to be susceptible to geologically rare stresses. SN - 0036-8075 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/11542058/Biological_extinction_in_earth_history_ L2 - https:///www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.11542058?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub=pubmed DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -