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1 nian (~92 Ma) of southern Laramidia (western North America).
2 d in both regions (34.1% in Europe; 41.1% in north America).
3 s four continents (Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America).
4 ent and the migratory success of monarchs in North America.
5 times of day, seasons, and locations across North America.
6 ons of winter climate for Europe and eastern North America.
7 oes from two locations in Eurasia and two in North America.
8 01 examples of this strategy in southwestern North America.
9 ubtropical forests and grasslands of eastern North America.
10 raises increasing public health concerns in North America.
11 rvation priority in many forested regions of North America.
12 m 28 pregnancy/birth cohorts from Europe and North America.
13 which seems connected to radiation events in North America.
14 one of the most virulent viruses endemic to North America.
15 l and future climate scenarios across boreal North America.
16 on networks became established in Europe and North America.
17 from different cervid species in Norway and North America.
18 can migrate distances exceeding 1,500 km in North America.
19 ouples attempting to conceive in Denmark and North America.
20 failure (CHF) is inconclusive, especially in North America.
21 ensity of regional precipitation extremes in North America.
22 e to the severity of the 2017-2018 season in North America.
23 n exceptionally large environmental space in North America.
24 ts are the most prevalent land cover type in North America.
25 infection caused by Borrelia burgdorferi in North America.
26 nomalous changes and their driving forces in North America.
27 the most common tick-transmitted illness in North America.
28 cancer centres in 13 countries in Europe and North America.
29 out the distributed range of wild turkeys in North America.
30 higher rate than non-protected lands across North America.
31 nctional groups (FG) along the west coast of North America.
32 led after 1950 in coastal depocenters around North America.
33 uth America along their migratory journey to North America.
34 e, as perceived by key ICU clinicians across North America.
35 f colony mortality, especially in Europe and North America.
36 pancreatic cancers was highest in Europe and North America.
37 logical dominance of A. petiolata in eastern North America.
38 income countries and less frequently used in North America.
39 me infection in patient samples from outside North America.
40 ene significantly impacted ecosystems across North America.
41 y sites across the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America.
42 MI] was 16.7) was conducted at five sites in North America.
43 s a multicenter network of advanced CICUs in North America.
44 ling ducks throughout Europe, East Asia, and North America.
45 mation products in the indoor environment in North America.
46 se research is predominantly from Europe and North America.
47 Southeast Asia, India and Nepal, Africa, and North America.
48 o spread into Asia and the southern areas of North America.
49 mic threat if populations are established in North America.
50 o large power plants and three megacities in North America.
51 m 19 countries across Europe, Australia, and North America.
52 nisms for Cenozoic extension in southwestern North America.
53 Ds) exist worldwide, with high prevalence in North America.
54 the most widespread Pleistocene megafauna in North America.
55 scular aortic aneurysm repair at 20 sites in North America.
56 tes in Australia, Europe, Israel, Japan, and north America.
57 nd temperate land across Eurasia, Africa and North America.
58 re are no equivalent studies for glaciers in North America.
59 s a multicenter network of tertiary CICUs in North America.
60 aphic range that includes western regions of North America.
61 arly during the last two decades in parts of North America.
62 rs of asthma remission by early adulthood in North America.
63 dient of breeding sites on the east coast of North America.
64 a, and stinging insect allergy in Europe and North America.
65 subcontinent, Africa, East Asia, Europe and North America.
66 h America, and possibly the C3-P39/Z30536 in North America.
67 allel-design study conducted at 522 sites in North America.
68 bird communities in the Pacific Northwest of North America.
69 d various avian species in Asia, Europe, and North America.
70 ial infection, is dramatically increasing in North America.
71 the end-Pleistocene megafaunal extinction in North America.
72 lopments in mineral processing techniques in North America.
73 bout 6 times more slowly in Amazonia than in North America.
74 drought are becoming commonplace throughout North America.
75 ng rapidly in wild populations of cervids in North America.
76 tes in 13 countries across Asia, Europe, and North America.
77 involved participants from across Europe and North America.
78 atus (PEMA), an abundant rodent found across North America.
79 case study of the Western Interconnection of North America.
80 fts in 32 species of birds native to eastern North America.
81 igration to countries in Europe, Africa, and North America.
82 elevated cholesterol than western Europe and North America.
83 of 684 carnivores from seven communities in North America.
84 sy-proven LCCN from 10 centers in Europe and North America.
85 greenness and seasonal bird migration within North America.
86 chaeological sites on the Northwest Coast of North America.
87 rnianus) is the largest New World Vulture in North America.
88 real-temperate and forest-tundra ecotones of North America.
89 pecies now or formerly living in Cuba and/or North America.
90 ombinants was greatest in Western Europe and North America.
93 frica (25 [42%]), south Asia (13 [22%]), and North America (13 [22%]) and mainly measured health indi
96 with 95% CIs) were observed for studies from North America (2.24 [1.76-2.85]), Northern Europe (2.90
98 rope (43.07%) followed by Asia (38.09%), and North America (29.64%) while case fatality rates remaine
101 (6.4%-8.4%); Western and Central Europe and North America, 6.0% (5.5%-6.7%); and Latin America and t
102 7.4% (6.4-8.4), Western and Central Europe & North America: 6.0% (5.5-6.7), and Latin America & the C
105 implemented primarily in the United Kingdom, North America and Australia, whereby nurses conduct 1-2
106 ng whether this is the same disease known in North America and caused by Blastomyces dermatitidis and
108 t remains limited to a handful of centers in North America and comprises only 5% of liver transplants
109 ntries across Asia, Australasia, Europe, and North America and enrolled adults with active psoriatic
110 lly diverse boreal plants and lichens across North America and Eurasia to show that host filtering in
111 ast frequently identified high-risk types in North America and Europe but was the most common high-ri
112 stal delta(56)Fe, soluble aerosols from near North America and Europe instead have remarkably fractio
113 recovery of terrestrial large carnivores in North America and Europe is accompanied by intense contr
114 ere have also been multiple outbreaks across North America and Europe of invasive meningococcal disea
115 B patients attending two tertiary centers in North America and Europe over 13 years with available cl
116 fires around the globe, ranging from western North America and Europe to the Amazon and Arctic, and,
117 carnivores in many systems, such as areas in North America and Europe where large predator species ar
118 assessed biotic responses to urbanization in North America and Europe, but there is little empirical
119 g-term data for 66 bumble bee species across North America and Europe, we tested whether this mechani
120 ZIKV transmission temperature suitability in North America and Europe, where naive populations might
132 coons of Hyalophora species found throughout North America and investigated the evolution of architec
134 of anxiety and 40% of cases of depression in north America and more than a quarter of both conditions
135 learctic, has now spread across the whole of North America and most of Europe, both of which caused s
140 uicide is the 10th leading cause of death in North America and the foremost cause of death worldwide
141 tial for spread via international trade into North America and the high diversity of salamanders has
143 aggregated from the Radiological Society of North America and the Society for Imaging Informatics in
144 e opposite change of LST in the northeastern North America and the southeastern United States, and th
145 the pattern-based approach commonly used in North America and the widely used, European-based, algor
148 Only trials done outside western Europe or North America and without variation in age schedules (ie
150 Latin America and the Caribbean to 19.55% in North America) and country (4.16% in China to 22.40% in
154 from year 1987 to 2017, mainly from Europe, North America, and Australia, covering the management of
156 tury in northwestern Europe and southeastern North America, and during the mid-nineteenth century ove
157 ineage A/G, containing mostly sequences from North America, and lineage B/S, containing mainly sequen
158 ost dates of winter have advanced throughout North America, and many angiosperm taxa have simultaneou
159 ncreasing trends in extreme precipitation in North America, and models and theory consistently sugges
160 early every study was conducted in Europe or North America, and most studies were on terrestrial seco
162 34 GIWs, mostly distributed in Asia, Europe, North America, and South America, typically following a
166 elated HCT done in Australia, Europe, Japan, North America, and the UK between Jan 1, 1988, and Dec 3
170 he land surface temperature (LST) changes in North America are very abnormal recently, but few studie
171 tients from other areas of Asia, Europe, and North America, as well as other unique subtypes, suggest
172 nter phase 3 randomized controlled trials in North America, Australia, and Europe (FIT1 and FIT2).
173 otypes of Lso (LsoA and LsoB) are present in North America; both are transmitted by the tomato psylli
174 known for their continent-scale migration in North America but have repeatedly become established as
175 igh abundances throughout invaded regions of North America, but has recently declined in many of thes
176 high-elevation forest ecosystems of western North America, but some parts of the geographic range ha
177 er mortality rates are increasing in western North America, but the physiological mechanisms underlyi
178 aurs were abundant in the Late Cretaceous of North America, but their habitats remain poorly understo
179 n the meridional steering wind response over North America, but-consistently across models-stronger J
180 man land uses on climate connectivity across North America by comparing two climate connectivity scen
181 waterbird migration networks across western North America by reconstructing long-term patterns (1984
182 fluenza (HPAI) clade 2.3.4.4 virus spread to North America by wild birds and reassorted to generate t
183 borne icosahedral alphavirus found mainly in North America, causes human and equine neurotropic infec
184 rates from the oligotrophic Sargasso Sea to North America coastal waters, driven primarily by cyanob
187 with members of the Radiological Society of North America COVID-19 Task Force, including discussions
188 h stocking in mountainous regions of western North America creates a unique, natural quasiexperiment
190 ulation-weighted annual average PM(2.5) over North America decreased from 22 +/- 6.4 mug m(-3) in 198
191 e survey to determine if Bsal was present in North America designed to target taxa and localities whe
192 women attempting to conceive in Denmark and North America, diets high in GL, carbohydrate-to-fiber r
193 he observed Omega from 28 FLUXNET sites over North America during 2000-2007, which was then used to e
194 ly that the marine-influenced environment in North America during the Campanian may have played an im
195 es for IBD from 2010 to 2015 were highest in North America (eg, 33.9 per 100 000 in the USA), Europe
198 466 patients recruited from 102 sites across North America, Europe, Australia, and Asia with relapsed
199 c and community hospitals in 22 countries in North America, Europe, South America, Asia, Australia, N
203 mated historical PM(2.5) concentrations over North America from 1981 to 2016 for the first time by co
204 tances between Europe and Asia and colonised North America from Asia in multiple independent events.
205 rter snake predators (Thamnophis) in western North America has become a classic example of coevolutio
207 espread use of neonicotinoid insecticides in North America has led to frequent detection of neonicoti
208 reas the growth of open access in Europe and North America has mostly been driven by repositories.
209 nsion of availability of medical cannabis in North America have led to an increase in cannabis use an
210 hat irruptive spruce beetle outbreaks across North America have primarily been driven by warming-ampl
211 approved over the past decade in Europe and North America have provided new therapeutic options for
212 er the past half century, migratory birds in North America have shown divergent population trends rel
213 th a higher prevalence of 2-5% in Europe and North America, highlighting the need for increased diagn
214 ian cervids are distinct from those found in North America, implying that the highly contagious North
215 assays on 34 saprotrophic fungi from across North America in the laboratory with a 5-y field study c
216 l and measurements show a decline in Se over North America in the last two decades because of changes
217 s of daily large-scale weather patterns over North America in the outputs of a fully-coupled climate
218 nsfer, humans have moved as much sediment in North America in the past century as natural processes c
219 arrow northward jets along the west coast of North America, in association with a substantial rise of
220 the progress in the 1D/2D-FET biosensors in North America, in the last decade, is summarized in tabl
221 ay disrupt other ecological processes across North America, including pollination, herbivory, and dis
223 redominantly extension in western intraplate North America is likely due (at least in part) to drag a
225 ic hermaphrodite of commercial importance in North America, is the primary target species for shrimp
226 rom high-income countries such in Europe and North-America, it is difficult to address the wider soci
228 es from desert dunes in the Mojave Desert in North America, Merriam's kangaroo rat Dipodomys merriami
230 lf of the studies (n = 27) were conducted in North America (n = 27), and 25/54 employed a qualitative
231 ) from two continental stock groups (CSG) in North America (NA) and Southern Europe (SE) over the per
233 ce and diversity of AMR genes between Europe/North-America/Oceania and Africa/Asia/South-America.
235 s that were multicenter, were coordinated in North America or Europe, tested drug interventions, or h
236 .18 to 0.96; p = 0.037), were coordinated in North America (OR: 0.21; 95% CI: 0.08 to 0.70; p = 0.011
237 tified by geographical region (Asia, Europe, North America, or South America) and previous treatment
238 ulation recovery, monarch enthusiasts across North America participate in a variety of conservation e
239 eo-highlands collapsed, influence of Pacific-North America plate motion and associated deformation st
241 eous (Campanian-Maastrichtian [83-66 Ma]) of North America provides the best record to address this d
243 y only included participants from Europe and North America, results need to be carefully interpreted
246 rative approach and report the occurrence of North America's largest terrestrial mammalian carnivore,
248 acts greater than in the Gulf of Maine where North America's most valuable marine species, the Americ
249 ctivity, tortuosity, and diet in portions of North America's northern hardwood/boreal ecosystem.
250 mula: see text]) covering 715 y of growth of North America's oldest boreal trees (Thuja occidentalis
252 and longest-running epidemiologic society in North America, SER has long been a pioneer in promoting
255 ) that enrolled patients at 109 sites across North America, South America, Europe, and the Asia-Pacif
256 4, 2016, at 162 sites in 25 countries across North America, South America, Europe, and the Asia-Pacif
257 large, disintegrating asteroid/comet struck North America, South America, Europe, and western Asia ~
258 P. triticina from wheat producing regions in North America, South America, Europe, the Middle East, E
259 study locations (North Dakota and Georgia in North America; southern Brazil and Argentinian Patagonia
260 are positively related to AI occurrence over North America such that as waterfowl occurrence probabil
261 sistent 21st-century drought in southwestern North America (SWNA) motivates comparisons to medieval m
263 using on the West Nile virus (WNV) spread in North America that has substantially impacted public, ve
264 unflowers consist of c. 50 species native to North America that occupy diverse habitats and vary in p
266 vested bird valued by birders and hunters in North America, the northern pintail duck (Anas acuta), a
267 m the FLUXNET Network for 34 forest sites in North America, the seasonal pattern of sensitivities of
269 ince the early 1970s, species that remain in North America throughout the year, including both reside
270 15) N) in the Northern Great Plains (NGP) of North America to examine N constraints on greening.
271 ng a geographically weighted regression over North America to produce a spatially complete representa
272 ike-slip and/or reverse faulting) in eastern North America to strike-slip faulting in the mid-contine
275 , the primary Lyme disease vector in western North America, to projected climate and land use change.
276 ative principal stress magnitudes throughout North America together with hundreds of new horizontal s
278 est in Western Europe (Spain and France) and North America (United States) (up to 39 distinct HIV-1 v
280 es in the USA and into part B at 20 sites in North America (USA, 17 sites; Canada, three sites).
281 l manuscript publication year, enrollment in North America (versus Western Europe), female sex, and o
283 t the widespread expansion of humans through North America was a key factor in the extinction of larg
285 of the dominance-tolerance trade-off across North America, we approximate broad-scale patterns in in
286 from the UK, Northern Europe, Australia, and North America, we constructed haplotype genetic scores u
287 base from 169 hospitals in Asia, Europe, and North America, we evaluated the relationship of cardiova
289 for 10 480 woody dicots in China and 2374 in North America, we show that the variation in community m
290 om assumed prior Net Ecosystem Exchange over North America, we show that this can be overcome with ad
292 udies (3377 patients) from Asia, Europe, and North America were included (14 of 34 adult studies incl
294 WHO regional classification (Latin America, North America, western Europe, eastern Europe, eastern M
295 ted clinics located in regions of Europe and North America, where there is a high incidence of HIV or
296 wide, including of the YF-VAX(R) stockout in North America, which has presented many challenges.
297 trials and patient registries in Europe and North America who were uniformly treated with rituximab
299 If human emissions continue to increase, North America will see further increases in these extrem
300 liaria petiolata (garlic mustard) in eastern North America with distinct local and regional dynamics