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Benton et al., 2015

Constraints on the timescale of animal evolutionary history

Benton, M., Donoghue, P., Vinther, J., Asher, R., Friedman, M., Near, T.
DOI
DOI10.26879/424
Year2015
JournalPalaeontologia Electronica
Number18.1.1FC
Pages1-106
Typearticle in journal
OpenAccess
LanguageEnglish
Id4345

Abstract

Dating the tree of life is a core endeavor in evolutionary biology. Rates of evolution are fundamental to nearly every evolutionary model and process. Rates need dates. There is much debate on the most appropriate and reasonable ways in which to date the tree of life, and recent work has highlighted some confusions and complexities that can be avoided. Whether phylogenetic trees are dated after they have been established , or as part of the process of tree finding, practitioners need to know which calibrations to use. We emphasize the importance of identifying crown (not stem) fossils, levels of confidence in their attribution to the crown, current chronostratigraphic precision , the primacy of the host geological formation and asymmetric confidence intervals. Here we present calibrations for 88 key nodes across the phylogeny of animals, ranging from the root of Metazoa to the last common ancestor of Homo sapiens. Close attention to detail is constantly required: for example, the classic bird-mammal date (base of crown Amniota) has often been given as 310-315 Ma; the 2014 international time scale indicates a minimum age of 318 Ma.

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