5 research outputs found

    Map showing the Atchison, Topeka and Santa FĂ© Railroad system, with its connections.

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    Map of the southwestern states from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean; indicates in table form miles of lines in Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, and Mexico; shows relief by hachures, drainage, state boundaries, and cities and towns.Scale 1:3,800,000.LC also has editions of 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1890, and 1892.LC Railroad maps, 322Description derived from published bibliography

    Map showing the Atchison, Topeka & Santa FĂ© Rail Road and its auxiliary roads in the state of Kansas.

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    Shows drainage, cities and towns, township and county boundaries, and the railroad network with emphasis on the main line.Scale 1:1,140,000.LC Railroad maps, 324Description derived from published bibliography

    Exploring the tempo of species diversification in legumes

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    AbstractWhatever criteria are used to measure evolutionary success – species numbers, geographic range, ecological abundance, ecological and life history diversity, background diversification rates, or the presence of rapidly evolving clades – the legume family is one of the most successful lineages of flowering plants. Despite this, we still know rather little about the dynamics of lineage and species diversification across the family through the Cenozoic, or about the underlying drivers of diversification. There have been few attempts to estimate net species diversification rates or underlying speciation and extinction rates for legume clades, to test whether among-lineage variation in diversification rates deviates from null expectations, or to locate species diversification rate shifts on specific branches of the legume phylogenetic tree. In this study, time-calibrated phylogenetic trees for a set of species-rich legume clades – Calliandra, Indigofereae, Lupinus, Mimosa and Robinieae – and for the legume family as a whole, are used to explore how we might approach these questions. These clades are analysed using recently developed maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods to detect species diversification rate shifts and test for among-lineage variation in speciation, extinction and net diversification rates. Possible explanations for rate shifts in terms of extrinsic factors and/or intrinsic trait evolution are discussed. In addition, several methodological issues and limitations associated with these analyses are highlighted emphasizing the potential to improve our understanding of the evolutionary dynamics of legume diversification by using much more densely sampled phylogenetic trees that integrate information across broad taxonomic, geographical and temporal levels

    Environmental costs and benefits of transportation biofuel production from food- and lignocellulose-based energy crops. A review

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