The Structure of Evolutionary Theory

Home > Other > The Structure of Evolutionary Theory > Page 218
The Structure of Evolutionary Theory Page 218

by Stephen Jay Gould


  Grine, F. E. 1993. Australopithecine taxonomy and phylogeny. In R. L. Ciochon and J. Fleagle, eds., The Human Evolution Source Book. Englewood Cliffs N.J.: Prentice Hall, pp. 145-175.

  Gruber, H. E., and P. H. Barrett. 1974. Darwin on Man: A Psychological Study of Scientific Creativity. N.Y.: Dutton.

  Haas, O., and G. G. Simpson. 1946. Analysis of some phylogenetic terms with at­tempts at redefinition. Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc. 90: 319-349.

  Haeckel, E. 1866. Generelle Morphologie der Organismen. Berlin: Georg Reimer.

  --------1909. Charles Darwin as an anthropologist. In A. C. Seward, ed., Darwin and Modern Science. Cambridge UK: Cambridge Univ. Press, pp. 137-151.

  Haim, A., G. Heth, H. Pratt, and E. Nevo. 1983. Photoperiodic effects of the thermoregulation in a “blind” subterranean mammal. Jour. Experimental Biol. 107: 59-64.

  Halanych, K. M., J. D. Bacheller, A. M. A. Aguinaldo, S. M. Liva, D. M. Hillis, and J. A. Lake. 1995. Evidence of 18S ribosomal DNA that the lophophorates are protostome animals. Science 267: 1641-1643. [Page 1362]

  Haldane, J. B. S. 1932. The Causes of Evolution. London: Longmans Green.

  Haider, G., P. Callaerts, and W. J. Gehring. 1995. Induction of ectopic eyes by tar­geted expression of the eyeless gene in Drosophila. Science 267: 1788-1792.

  Hallam, A. 1968. Morphology, paleoecology and evolution of the genus Gryphaea in the British Lias. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London 254: 91-128.

  --------1978. How rare is phyletic gradualism and what is its evolutionary sig­nificance? Evidence from Jurassic bivalves. Paleobiology 4:16-25.

  --------1990. Biotic and abiotic factors in the evolution of early marine molluscs. In R. M. Ross and W. D. Allmon, eds., Causes of Evolution: A Paleontological Per­spective. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chicago Press, pp. 249-269.

  --------1997. Speciation patterns and trends in the fossil record. GEOBIOS 30: 921-930.

  Halstead, B. 1984. Neo-Darwinism rules. New Scientist, May 3, p. 40.

  --------1985. The Evolution debate continues. Modern Geology 9: 317-326.

  Hamilton, W. D. 1964. The genetical evolution of social behavior. Jour. Theoret. Biol. 7: 1-52.

  --------1971. Selection of selfish and altruistic behavior in some extreme models. In J. E. Eisenberg and W. S. Dillon, eds., Man and Beast. Comparative Social Be­havior. Washington DC: Smithsonian Inst. Press, pp. 57-91.

  --------1987. Discriminating nepotism: expectable, common, overlooked. In D. S. C. Fletcher and C. D. Michener, eds., Kin Recognition in Animals. N.Y.: John Wiley, pp. 417-437.

  Hansen, T. A. 1978. Larval dispersal and species longevity in Lower Tertiary gastro­pods. Science 199: 885-887.

  --------1980. Influence of larval dispersal and geographic distribution on species lon­gevity in neogastropods. Paleobiology 6: 193-207.

  Hanson, N. R. 1961. Patterns of Discovery. Cambridge UK: Cambridge Univ. Press.

  Harraway, D. 1989. Primate Visions: Gender, Race and Nature in the World of Mod­ern Science. N.Y.: Routledge.

  --------1991. Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature. London: Free Association Books.

  Hatcher, J. B., O. C. Marsh, and R. S. Lull. 1907. The Ceratopsia. Monographs U.S. Geol. Survey, volume 49.

  Heaton, T. H. 1993. The Ologocene rodent Ischyromys of the Great Plains: replace­ment mistaken for anagenesis. Jour. Paleontology 67: 297-308.

  --------1996. Ischyromyidae. In The Terrestrial Eocene-Oligocene Transition in North America, pp. 373-398.

  Hempel, C. G. 1965. Aspects of Scientific Explanation. N.Y.: Free Press.

  Hendriks, W, T. Leunissen, E. Nevo, H. Bloemendal, and W. W de Jong. 1987. The lens protein alpha-A-crystallin of the blind mole rat Spalax ehrenbergi: evolu­tionary change and functional constraints. Proc. Natl. Acad. Set. USA 84: 5320-5324.

  Hilgendorf, F. 1866. Planorbis multiformis im Steinheimer Susswasserkalk. Ein Beispiel von Gestaltsveranderung im Laufe der Zeit. Berlin: Weber.

  Hofer, J., L. Turner, R. Hellens, M. Ambrose, P. Matthews, A. Michael, and N. Ellis. 1997. Unifoliata regulates leaf and flower morphogenesis in pea. Current Biol­ogy 7: 581-587.

  Hoffman, P. F, A. J. Kaufman, G. P.. Halverson, and D. P. Schrag. 1998. A Neoproterozoic snowball earth. Science 281: 1342-1346.

  Hoffman, A. 1989. Arguments on Evolution. N.Y.: Oxford.

  Hogan, B. L. M. 1995. Upside-down ideas vindicated. Nature 376: 210-211.

  Holland, L. Z., and N. D. Holland. 1998. Developmental gene expression in amphioxus: new insights into the evolutionary origin of vertebrate brain regions, neural crest, and rostrocaudal segmentation. Amer. Zool. 38: 647-658. [Page 1363]

  Holland, L. Z., M. Kene, N. A. Williams, and N. D. Holland. 1997. Sequence and embryonic expression of the amphioxus engrailed gene (AmphiEn): the metameric pattern of transcription resembles that of its segment-polarity homolog in Drosophila. Development 124: 1723-1732.

  Holland, P. W. H., L. Z. Holland, N. A. Williams, and N. D. Holland. 1992. An amphioxus homeobox gene: sequence conservation, spatial expression during development and insight into vertebrate evolution. Development 116: 653-661.

  Holley, S. A., P. D. Jackson, Y. Sasai, B. Lu, E. M. De Robertis, F. M. Hoffmann, and E. L. Ferguson. 1995. A conserved system for dorsal-ventral patterning in insects and vertebrates involving sog and chordin. Nature 376: 249-253.

  Honma, X, and K. Goto. 2001. Complexes of MADS-box proteins are sufficient to convert leaves into floral organs. Nature 409: 525-529.

  Hooykaas, R. 1963. The Principle of Uniformity in Geology, Biology, and Theology. Leiden: E. J. Brill.

  Houston, A. I. 1997. Are the spandrels of San Marco really panglossian pendentives? Trends Ecol. Evol. 12: 125.

  Howe, J. A. 1956. The Oligocene rodent Ischyromys in relationship to the paleosols of the Brule Formation. MS. Thesis, Univ. of Nebraska, 89 pp.

  Howells, W. 1959. Mankind in the Making. Garden City NJ: Doubleday.

  Hughes, N. C. 2000. The rocky road to Mendel's play. Evol. and Develop. 2: 63-66.

  Hull, D. L. 1973. Darwin and His Critics. Cambridge MA: Harvard Univ. Press.

  --------1976. Are species really individuals? Systematic Zool. 25: 174-191.

  --------1980. Individuality and selection. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Systematics 11: 311-332.

  --------1984. Lamarck among the Anglos. In J.-B. Lamarck, Zoological Philosophy. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chicago Press, pp. xi-lxvi.

  --------1985. Darwinism as a historical entity. In D. Kohn, ed., The Darwinian Heritage. Princeton N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, pp. 773-812.

  --------1988. Science as a Process. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chicago Press.

  Hummelinck, P. W. 1940. Mollusks of the genera Cerion and Tudora. Studies of the Fauna of Curacao, Aruba, Bonaire and the Venezuelan Islands 2: 43-82.

  Hutchinson, G. E. 1948. In memoriam D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson. Amer. Scien­tist 36: 577-606.

  Huxley, A. 1982. Address of the President. Proc. Roy. Soc. London Series B 214: 137-152.

  Huxley, J. S. 1932. Problems of Relative Growth. London: Methuen & Co.

  --------1942. Evolution, the modern synthesis. London: Allen and Unwin.

  --------1953. Evolution in Action. London: Chatto & Windus.

  --------1960. The Evolutionary Vision. In S. Tax and C. Callender, eds., Evolution After Darwin, Volume III. Issues in Evolution, pp. 249-261.

  Huxley, T. H. 1893. Evolution and Ethics. In Evolution and Ethics and Other Essays. Volume 9 (published 1894) of T. H. Huxley's Collected Essays. N.Y.: D. Appleton.

  --------1894 (reprint of address given in 1868). Presidential Address, Geological So­ciety of London. In Discourses, Biological and Geological Essays. N.Y.: D. Appleton.

  Hyatt, A. 1880. The genesis of the Tertiary species of Planorbis at Steinheim. Anni­versary Mem. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. (1830-1880), pp. 1-114.

  --------1889. Genesis of the Arietidae. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard Univ. 16: 1-238.

  --------1897a. Cycle in the life of the individual (ontogeny) and in
the evolution of its own group (phylogeny). Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. 32: 209-224.

  --------1897b. The influence of woman in the evolution of the human race. Natural Science 11: 89-93.

  Hyde, W. X, X J. Crowley, S. K. Baum, and W. R. Peltier. 2000. Neoproterozoic [Page 1364] “snowball Earth” simulations with a coupled climate/ice-sheet model. Nature 405: 425-429.

  Imbrie, J. 1957. The species problem with fossil animals. In E. Mayr, ed., The Species Problem. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci. Pub. No. 50, pp. 125-153.

  Ivany, L. C. 1996. Coordinated stasis or coordinated turnover? Exploring intrinsic vs. extrinsic controls on pattern. Palaeogeog. Palaeoclimat. Palaeoecol. 127:1-18.

  Ivany, L. C, and K. M. Schof, eds., 1996. New Perspectives on Faunal Stability in the Fossil Record. Special Issue of Palaeogeog. Palaeoclimatol. Palaeoecol. Volume 127, 359 pp.

  Jablonski, D. 1986a. Larval ecology and macroevolution in marine invertebrates. Bull. Marine Sci. 39: 565-587.

  --------1986b. Background and mass extinctions: the alternation of macroevolutionary regimes. Science 231: 129-133.

  --------1987. Heritability at the species level: analysis of geographic ranges of Creta­ceous mollusks. Science 238: 360-363.

  --------1996. Body size and macroevolution. In D. Jablonski, D. H. Erwin, and J. H. Lipps, eds., Evolutionary Paleobiology. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chicago Press, pp. 256-289.

  --------1997. Body-size evolution in Cretaceous molluscs and the status of Cope's rule. Nature 385: 250-252.

  --------1999. The future of the fossil record. Science 284: 2114-2116.

  Jablonski, D., and D. J. Bottjer. 1983. Soft-substratum epifaunal suspension-feeding assemblages in the late Cretaceous: implications for the evolution of benthic communities. In M. J. Tevesz and P. L. McCall, eds., Biotic Interactions in Re­cent and Fossil Benthic Communities. N.Y.: Plenum, pp. 747-812.

  Jablonski, D., S. Lidgard, and P. D. Taylor. 1997. Comparative ecology of bryozoan radiations: origin of novelties in cyclostomes and cheilostomes. Palaios 12: 505-523.

  Jablonski, N. G., and G. Chaplin. 1999. Chimp cultural diversity. Science 285: 836-837.

  Jackson, J. B. C, and A. H. Cheetham. 1990. Evolutionary significance of morphospecies: a test with Cheilostome Bryozoa. Science 248: 579-582.

  --------1994. Phylogeny reconstruction and the tempo of speciation in cheilostome Bryozoa. Paleobiology 20: 407-423.

  --------1999. Tempo and mode of speciation in the sea. Trends Ecol. Evol. 14: 72-77.

  Jacobs, K., and L. Godfrey. 1982. Cerebral leaps and bounds: a punctuational per­spective on hominid cranial capacity increase. Man and His Origins 21: 77-87.

  Janzen, D. 1977. What are dandelions and aphids? Amer. Nat. Ill: 586-589.

  --------1985. On ecological fitting. Oikos 45: 308-310.

  Jenkin, H. C. F. 1867. “The Origin of Species.” North British Review 46: 277-318.

  Johanson, D., and M. Edey. 1981. Lucy. N.Y.: Simon & Schuster.

  Johanson, D., and B. Edgar. 1996. From Lucy to Language. N.Y.: Simon & Schuster.

  Johnson, A. L. A. 1985. The rate of evolutionary change in European Jurassic scal­lops. In J. C. W. Cope and P. W. Skelton, eds., Evolutionary Case Histories From The Fossil Record. Special Papers in Palaeontology 33: 91-102.

  Johnson, J. G. 1975. Allopatric speciation in fossil brachiopods. Jour. Paleontol. 49: 646-661.

  --------1982. Occurrence of phyletic gradualism and punctuated equilibria through geological time. Jour. Palaeontol. 56: 1329-1331.

  Jones, D. S., and S. J. Gould. 1999. Direct measurement of age in fossil Gryphaea: the solution to a classic problem in heterochrony. Paleobiology 25: 158-187.

  Jones, K. C, and A. J. Gaudin. 1977. Introductory Biology. N.Y.: John Wiley. [Page 1365]

  Jukes, T. H. 1991. Early development of the neutral theory. Perspectives Biol. Medi­cine 34: 473-485.

  Jurgens, G. 1997. Memorizing the floral ABC. Nature 386: 17.

  Kammer, T. W., T. K. Baumiller, and W. I. Ausich. 1997. Species longevity as a func­tion of niche breadth: Evidence from fossil crinoids. Geology 25: 219-222.

  Kauffman, S. A. 1993. The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.

  Kazazian, H. H., Jr. 2000. LI retrotransposons shape the mammalian genome. Sci­ence 289: 1152-1153.

  Kelley, P. H. 1983. Evolutionary patterns of eight Chesapeake group molluscs: evi­dence for the model of punctuated equilibria. Jour. Paleontol. 57: 581-598.

  --------1984. Multivariate analysis of evolutionary patterns of seven Miocene Chesa­peake Group molluscs. Jour. Paleontol 58: 1235-1250.

  Kellogg, V. L. 1907. Darwinism Today. London: G. Bell & Sons.

  --------1917. Headquarters Nights. Boston.

  Kemp, P. D., and M. D. Bertness. 1984. Snail shape and growth rates: evidence for plastic shell allometry in Littorina littorea. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81: 811—813.

  Kerr, R. A. 1994. Between extinctions, evolutionary stasis. Science 266: 29.

  --------1995. Did Darwin get it all right? Science 267: 1421-1422.

  Kessel, M., R. Balling, and P. Gruss. 1990. Variations of cervical vertebrae after ex­pression of a Hox-1.1 transgene in mice. Cell 61: 301-308.

  Kessel, M., and P. Gruss. 1991. Murine developmental control genes. Science 249: 374-379.

  Kettle, C, W. Arthur, T. Jowett, and A. Minelli. 1999. Homeotic transformation in a centipede. Trends in Genetics 15: 393.

  Kilgour, F. G. 1998. The Evolution of the Book. N.Y.: Oxford Univ. Press.

  Kimbel, W. H., D. C. Johanson, and Y. Rak. 1994. The first skull and other new dis­coveries of Australopithecus afarensis at Hadar, Ethiopia. Nature 368: 449 — 451.

  Kimmel, C. B. 1996. Was Urbilateria segmented? Trends in Genetics 12: 329-331.

  Kimura, M. 1968. Evolutionary rate at the molecular level. Nature 217: 624-626.

  --------1983. The Neutral theory of Molecular Evolution. Cambridge UK: Cam­bridge Univ. Press.

  --------1985. The neutral theory of molecular evolution. New Scientist, pp. 41-46.

  --------1991a. The neutral theory of molecular evolution: A review of recent evi­dence. Japanese Journal of Genetics 66: 367-386.

  --------1991b. Recent development of the neutral theory viewed from the Wrightian tradition of theoretical population genetics. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 5969-5973.

  King, M.-C, and A. C. Wilson. 1975. Evolution at two levels in humans and chim­panzees. Science 188: 107-116.

  Kingsolver, J. G., and M. A. R. Koehl. 1985. Aerodynamics, thermoregulation, and the evolution of insect wings: differential scaling and evolutionary change. Evo­lution 39: 488-504.

  Kinsey, A. C. 1936. The origin of higher categories in Cynips. Indiana Univ. Publ. Science Series No. 4, 336 pp.

  Kinsey, A. C, W. C. Pomeroy, C. E. Martin, and P. H. Gebhard. 1953. Sexual Behav­ior in the Human Eemale. Philadelphia PA: W B. Saunders.

  Kirschner, M., and J. Gerhart. 1998. Evolvability. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95: 8420-8427.

  Kitchell, J. A., D. L. Clark, and A. M. Gombos, Jr. 1986. Biological selectivity of ex­tinction: a link between background and mass extinction. Palaios 1: 504-511.

  Kitcher, P. 1985. Darwin's achievements. In N. Rescher, ed., Reason and Rationality in Natural Science. N.J.: Univ. Press of America, pp. 127-189. [Page 1366]

  Knoll, A. H., and S. B. Carroll. 1999. Early animal evolution: emerging views from comparative biology and geology. Science 284: 2129-2137.

  Kobayashi, M., H. Furuya, and P. W. H. Holland. 1999. Dicyemids are higher ani­mals. Nature: 401: 762.

  Koestler, A. 1971. The Case of the Midwife Toad. N.Y.: Random House.

  Kohn, D. 1980. Theories to work by: rejected theories, reproduction, and Darwin's path to natural selection. Studies Hist. Biol. 4: 67-170.

  --------1981. On the origin of the principle of diversity. Science 213: 1105-1108.

  --------1985a. Darwin's principle of divergence as internal dialogue. In D. Kohn, ed., The Da
rwinian Heritage. Princeton N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, pp. 245-257.

  --------1985b. The Darwinian Heritage. Princeton N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press.

  Konner, M. 1986. Revolutionary biology. The Sciences, p. 608.

  Korey, K. 1984. The Essential Darwin. Boston MA: Little, Brown.

  Kottler, M.J. 1985. Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace: two decades of de­bate over natural selection. In D. Kohn, ed., The Darwinian Heritage. Princeton NJ: Princeton Univ. Press, pp. 367-432.

  Kramer, E. M., and V. F. Irish. 1999. Evolution of genetic mechanisms controlling petal development. Nature 399: 144-148.

  Kraus, D. 1983. Concepts in Modern Biology. N.Y.: Globe Books.

  Krishtalka, L., and R. K. Stuckey. 1985. Revision of the Wind River faunas, early Eocene of central Wyoming. Part 7. Revision of Diacodexis (Mammalia, Artiodactyla). Ann. Carnegie Mus. 54:413-486.

  --------1986. Early Eocene artiodactyls from the San Juan Basin, New Mexico, and the Piceance Basin, Colorado. In K. M. Flanagan and J. A. Lillegraven, eds., Ver­tebrates, Phylogeny and Paleontology. Univ. Wyo. Contrib. Geol. Spec. Pap. 3: 183-197.

  Kropotkin, P. A. 1902. Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution. N.Y.: McClure Phillips.

  Kruuk, H. 1972. The Spotted Hyena. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chicago Press.

  Kucera, M., and B. A. Malmgren. 1998. Differences between evolution of mean form and evolution of new morphotypes: an example from Late Cretaceous plank-tonic foraminifera. Paleobiology 24: 49-63.

  Kuhn, T. S. 1962. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chi­cago Press.

  --------1969. Postscript to Second Edition of The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago IL: Univ. of Chicago Press.

  Lamarck, J.-B. 1801. Systeme des Animaux sans vertebres, ou Tableau general des classes, des ordres et des genres de ces animaux;... precede du Discours d'ouverture du cours de zoologie donne dans le Museum national d'Histoire naturelle, Van VIII de la Republique, le 21 floreal. Paris: Deterville.

  --------1802a. Hydrogeologie ou recherches sur Vinfluence qu'ont les eaux sur la sur­face du globe terrestre. Paris: chez l'auteur et Agasse, Maillard.

 

‹ Prev