- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Climatic controls on the ecological ascendancy of dinosaurs
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 206-214.e4
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Online
2022-12-16
DOI
10.1016/j.cub.2022.11.064
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- So Volcanoes Created the Dinosaurs? A Quantitative Characterization of the Early Evolution of Terrestrial Pan-Aves
- (2022) Max Cardoso Langer et al. Frontiers in Earth Science
- Oldest dinosauromorph from South America and the early radiation of dinosaur precursors in Gondwana
- (2022) Rodrigo T. Müller et al. GONDWANA RESEARCH
- Arctic ice and the ecological rise of the dinosaurs
- (2022) Paul Olsen et al. Science Advances
- Paleoenvironmental and Biotic Changes in the Late Triassic of Argentina: Testing Hypotheses of Abiotic Forcing at the Basin Scale
- (2022) Adriana C. Mancuso et al. Frontiers in Earth Science
- Rapid growth preceded gigantism in sauropodomorph evolution
- (2022) Jennifer Botha et al. CURRENT BIOLOGY
- Africa’s oldest dinosaurs reveal early suppression of dinosaur distribution
- (2022) Christopher T. Griffin et al. NATURE
- Northward dispersal of dinosaurs from Gondwana to Greenland at the mid-Norian (215–212 Ma, Late Triassic) dip in atmospheric pCO2
- (2021) Dennis V. Kent et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Climatic constraints on the biogeographic history of Mesozoic dinosaurs
- (2021) Alfio Alessandro Chiarenza et al. CURRENT BIOLOGY
- Sauropodomorph evolution across the Triassic–Jurassic boundary: body size, locomotion, and their influence on morphological disparity
- (2021) Cecilia Apaldetti et al. Scientific Reports
- Modeling Dragons: Using linked mechanistic physiological and microclimate models to explore environmental, physiological, and morphological constraints on the early evolution of dinosaurs
- (2020) David M. Lovelace et al. PLoS One
- A revision of the early neotheropod genus Sarcosaurus from the Early Jurassic (Hettangian–Sinemurian) of central England
- (2020) Martín D Ezcurra et al. ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
- Evidence for the Carnian Pluvial Episode in Gondwana: New multiproxy climate records and their bearing on early dinosaur diversification
- (2020) Adriana C. Mancuso et al. GONDWANA RESEARCH
- Climatic drivers of latitudinal variation in Late Triassic tetrapod diversity
- (2020) Emma M. Dunne et al. PALAEONTOLOGY
- Diversity dynamics of Phanerozoic terrestrial tetrapods at the local-community scale
- (2019) Roger A. Close et al. Nature Ecology & Evolution
- The multi-peak adaptive landscape of crocodylomorph body size evolution
- (2019) Pedro L. Godoy et al. BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
- Ngwevu intloko: a new early sauropodomorph dinosaur from the Lower Jurassic Elliot Formation of South Africa and comments on cranial ontogeny in Massospondylus carinatus
- (2019) Kimberley E.J. Chapelle et al. PeerJ
- Non-dinosaurian dinosauromorphs from the Chinle Formation (Upper Triassic) of the Eagle Basin, northern Colorado: Dromomeron romeri (Lagerpetidae) and a new taxon, Kwanasaurus williamparkeri (Silesauridae)
- (2019) Jeffrey W. Martz et al. PeerJ
- Dinosaur diversification linked with the Carnian Pluvial Episode
- (2018) Massimo Bernardi et al. Nature Communications
- An early trend towards gigantism in Triassic sauropodomorph dinosaurs
- (2018) Cecilia Apaldetti et al. Nature Ecology & Evolution
- A Giant Dinosaur from the Earliest Jurassic of South Africa and the Transition to Quadrupedality in Early Sauropodomorphs
- (2018) Blair W. McPhee et al. CURRENT BIOLOGY
- Phylogenetic reassessment of Pisanosaurus mertii Casamiquela, 1967, a basal dinosauriform from the Late Triassic of Argentina
- (2017) Federico L. Agnolín et al. JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC PALAEONTOLOGY
- Cope's rule and the adaptive landscape of dinosaur body size evolution
- (2017) Roger B. J. Benson et al. PALAEONTOLOGY
- Mercury evidence for pulsed volcanism during the end-Triassic mass extinction
- (2017) Lawrence M. E. Percival et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- End-Triassic mass extinction started by intrusive CAMP activity
- (2017) J.H.F.L. Davies et al. Nature Communications
- Palynology of the upper Chinle Formation in northern New Mexico, U.S.A.: Implications for biostratigraphy and terrestrial ecosystem change during the Late Triassic (Norian–Rhaetian)
- (2016) Sofie Lindström et al. REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY
- Extreme ecosystem instability suppressed tropical dinosaur dominance for 30 million years
- (2015) Jessica H. Whiteside et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Total-Evidence Dating under the Fossilized Birth–Death Process
- (2015) Chi Zhang et al. SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
- Climate constrains the evolutionary history and biodiversity of crocodylians
- (2015) Philip D. Mannion et al. Nature Communications
- Models for the Rise of the Dinosaurs
- (2014) Michael J. Benton et al. CURRENT BIOLOGY
- The fossilized birth-death process for coherent calibration of divergence-time estimates
- (2014) T. A. Heath et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Evidence for mesothermy in dinosaurs
- (2014) J. M. Grady et al. SCIENCE
- Phylogenetic evidence for a shift in the mode of mammalian body size evolution at the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary
- (2013) Graham J. Slater Methods in Ecology and Evolution
- Recognising ocean acidification in deep time: An evaluation of the evidence for acidification across the Triassic-Jurassic boundary
- (2012) Sarah E. Greene et al. EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
- First record of Mesozoic terrestrial vertebrates from Lithuania: phytosaurs (Diapsida: Archosauriformes) of probable Late Triassic age, with a review of phytosaur biogeography
- (2012) STEPHEN L. BRUSATTE et al. GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE
- MrBayes 3.2: Efficient Bayesian Phylogenetic Inference and Model Choice Across a Large Model Space
- (2012) Fredrik Ronquist et al. SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
- Corrigenda: Sereno PC (2012) Taxonomy, morphology, masticatory function and phylogeny of heterodontosaurid dinosaurs. ZooKeys 226: 1–225
- (2012) Paul Sereno ZooKeys
- paleotree: an R package for paleontological and phylogenetic analyses of evolution
- (2012) David W. Bapst Methods in Ecology and Evolution
- The Early Evolution of Archosaurs: Relationships and the Origin of Major Clades
- (2011) Sterling J. Nesbitt BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
- A temperate palaeodiversity peak in Mesozoic dinosaurs and evidence for Late Cretaceous geographical partitioning
- (2011) Philip D. Mannion et al. GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
- Atmospheric Carbon Injection Linked to End-Triassic Mass Extinction
- (2011) M. Ruhl et al. SCIENCE
- phytools: an R package for phylogenetic comparative biology (and other things)
- (2011) Liam J. Revell Methods in Ecology and Evolution
- Biology of the sauropod dinosaurs: the evolution of gigantism
- (2010) P. Martin Sander et al. BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
- Sampling-through-time in birth–death trees
- (2010) Tanja Stadler JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY
- The origin and early evolution of dinosaurs
- (2009) Max C. Langer et al. BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
- Was Dinosaurian Physiology Inherited by Birds? Reconciling Slow Growth in Archaeopteryx
- (2009) Gregory M. Erickson et al. PLoS One
- The first 50 Myr of dinosaur evolution: macroevolutionary pattern and morphological disparity
- (2008) S. L. Brusatte et al. Biology Letters
- Superiority, Competition, and Opportunism in the Evolutionary Radiation of Dinosaurs
- (2008) Stephen L. Brusatte et al. SCIENCE
- The phylogeny of the ornithischian dinosaurs
- (2007) Richard J. Butler et al. JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC PALAEONTOLOGY
Publish scientific posters with Peeref
Peeref publishes scientific posters from all research disciplines. Our Diamond Open Access policy means free access to content and no publication fees for authors.
Learn MoreAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started