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Title information

NEW

Echinoderm Paleobiology


Edited by William I Ausich and Gary D Webster
456 pages, 129 illustrations.
Indiana University Press
 
Hardcover | 2008 | £34.99 | approx. $51/€36

#174458 | ISBN-13: 9780253351289
The dominant faunal elements in shallow Paleozoic oceans, echinoderms are important to understanding these marine ecosystems. Echinoderms (which include such animals as sea stars, crinoids or sea lilies, sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers) have left a rich, and for science, extremely useful fossil record. For various reasons, they provide the ideal source for answers to the questions that will help us develop a more complete understanding of global environmental and biodiversity changes.

This volume highlights the modern study of fossil echinoderms and is organized into five parts: echinoderm paleoecology, functional morphology, and paleoecology; evolutionary paleoecology; morphology for refined phylogenetic studies; innovative applications of data encoded in echinoderms; and, information on new crinoid data sets.
 
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