Literature DB >> 26439347

The Neoproterozoic.

Nicholas J Butterfield1.   

Abstract

The Neoproterozoic era was arguably the most revolutionary in Earth history. Extending from 1000 to 541 million years ago, it stands at the intersection of the two great tracts of evolutionary time: on the one side, some three billion years of pervasively microbial 'Precambrian' life, and on the other the modern 'Phanerozoic' biosphere with its extraordinary diversity of large multicellular organisms. The disturbance doesn't stop here, however: over this same stretch of time the planet itself was in the throes of change. Tectonically, it saw major super-continental reconfigurations, climatically its deepest ever glacial freeze, and geochemically some of the most anomalous perturbations on record. What lies behind this dramatic convergence of biological and geological phenomena, and how exactly did it give rise to the curiously complex world that we now inhabit?
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26439347     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.07.021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  5 in total

Review 1.  Cryogenian evolution of stigmasteroid biosynthesis.

Authors:  Yosuke Hoshino; Aleksandra Poshibaeva; William Meredith; Colin Snape; Vladimir Poshibaev; Gerard J M Versteegh; Nikolay Kuznetsov; Arne Leider; Lennart van Maldegem; Mareike Neumann; Sebastian Naeher; Małgorzata Moczydłowska; Jochen J Brocks; Amber J M Jarrett; Qing Tang; Shuhai Xiao; David McKirdy; Supriyo Kumar Das; José Javier Alvaro; Pierre Sansjofre; Christian Hallmann
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2017-09-20       Impact factor: 14.136

Review 2.  Energy metabolism in anaerobic eukaryotes and Earth's late oxygenation.

Authors:  Verena Zimorski; Marek Mentel; Aloysius G M Tielens; William F Martin
Journal:  Free Radic Biol Med       Date:  2019-03-29       Impact factor: 7.376

3.  Free and kerogen-bound biomarkers from late Tonian sedimentary rocks record abundant eukaryotes in mid-Neoproterozoic marine communities.

Authors:  J Alex Zumberge; Don Rocher; Gordon D Love
Journal:  Geobiology       Date:  2019-12-21       Impact factor: 4.216

4.  Decimetre-scale multicellular eukaryotes from the 1.56-billion-year-old Gaoyuzhuang Formation in North China.

Authors:  Shixing Zhu; Maoyan Zhu; Andrew H Knoll; Zongjun Yin; Fangchen Zhao; Shufen Sun; Yuangao Qu; Min Shi; Huan Liu
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-05-17       Impact factor: 14.919

5.  Possible poriferan body fossils in early Neoproterozoic microbial reefs.

Authors:  Elizabeth C Turner
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-07-28       Impact factor: 49.962

  5 in total

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