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  2. Great American Interchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_American_Interchange

    Both groups started evolving in the Lower Paleocene, possibly from condylarth stock, diversified, dwindled before the great interchange, and went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene. The pyrotheres and astrapotheres were also strange, but were less diverse and disappeared earlier, well before the interchange.

  3. Southern Dispersal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Dispersal

    The southern route dispersal is primarily linked to the Initial Upper Paleolithic expansion of modern humans and "ascribed to a population movement with uniform genetic features and material culture" (Ancient East Eurasians), which was the major source for the peopling of the Asia–Pacific region.

  4. Isolation by distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isolation_by_distance

    Dispersal trends and rates were compared by using both spatial genetic structure and direct measures of dispersal. A total of 29 populations from three spatially different rock pools were subjected to allozyme analysis for four loci to access genetic variation and estimates of gene flow between populations were generated using population ...

  5. Pleistocene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleistocene

    The Pleistocene (/ ˈ p l aɪ s t ə ˌ s iː n,-s t oʊ-/ PLY-stə-seen, -⁠stoh-; [4] [5] referred to colloquially as the Ice Age) is the geological epoch that lasted from c. 2.58 million to 11,700 years ago, spanning the Earth's most recent period of repeated glaciations.

  6. Coastal migration (Americas) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal_migration_(Americas)

    The coastal migration hypothesis is one of two leading hypothesis about the settlement of the Americas at the time of the Last Glacial Maximum.It proposes one or more migration routes involving watercraft, via the Kurile island chain, along the coast of Beringia and the archipelagos off the Alaskan-British Columbian coast, continuing down the coast to Central and South America.

  7. Page–Ladson site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page–Ladson_site

    The Page–Ladson archaeological and paleontological site is a deep sinkhole in the bed of the karstic Aucilla River (between Jefferson and Taylor counties in the Big Bend region of Florida) that has stratified deposits of late Pleistocene and early Holocene animal bones and human artifacts.

  8. Paleontology in Rhode Island - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleontology_in_Rhode_Island

    Like during the Triassic and Jurassic, Rhode Island's sediments were being eroded away rather than deposited during the ensuing Paleogene and Neogene periods of the Cenozoic era, leaving another gap in the state's geologic and fossil record. More recently, during the Pleistocene, Rhode Island was scoured by glaciers. [2]

  9. Geodispersal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geodispersal

    In biogeography, geodispersal is the erosion of barriers to gene flow and biological dispersal (Lieberman, 2005.; [1] Albert and Crampton, 2010. [2]). Geodispersal differs from vicariance, which reduces gene flow through the creation of geographic barriers. [3]