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1 learning and cultural transmission alongside biological evolution.
2 tinental landscapes, migratory pathways, and biological evolution.
3 the genotype-phenotype correlations found in biological evolution.
4  that proposed in the target article for its biological evolution.
5 supports the influence of geologic events on biological evolution.
6 is has led to doubts about its importance in biological evolution.
7 idence of the role modeled mechanics play in biological evolution.
8 nating parallels between language change and biological evolution.
9 al gene transfer--a driving force throughout biological evolution.
10 edible structural diversity along with their biological evolution.
11 utionary features strikingly similar to real biological evolution.
12 is ethically required to preserve options in biological evolution.
13 0, profoundly affecting both geochemical and biological evolution.
14  simple mathematical models of sandpiles and biological evolution.
15 rotein types that is thought to occur during biological evolution.
16 superior RNA being the result of chemical or biological evolution.
17 e importance of planetary tectonic style for biological evolution.
18 possible link between geologic processes and biological evolution.
19 n transforms environments in ways that alter biological evolution.
20 y within species is key for adaptability and biological evolution.
21  evolvability that may have implications for biological evolution.
22 is the source of genetic variation and fuels biological evolution.
23    Scientists have grappled with reconciling biological evolution(1,2) with the immutable laws of the
24        Mobile genetic elements have impacted biological evolution across all studied organisms, but e
25 ical set is likely due to chemical and early biological evolution acting on the environmentally avail
26 c oceans and the causal relationship between biological evolution and changing environmental conditio
27 ation's climate adaptation capacity, through biological evolution and geographic dispersal, is a majo
28 ay be useful for studying physical forces in biological evolution and the role of climate change on b
29 reciprocal interactions between cultural and biological evolution are not limited to language, nativi
30 sent a systems view of the major features of biological evolution based upon changes in internal chem
31   Cellular functions are established through biological evolution, but are constrained by the laws of
32 n longevity with the consequent outpacing of biological evolution by cultural evolution.
33  paper focuses on the maximum speed at which biological evolution can occur.
34 st a trend in the evolution of complexity in biological evolution, complexity needs to be both rigoro
35 stabilized internal milieu, is ubiquitous in biological evolution, despite the entropic cost of exclu
36 c gradients and bifurcations, in tandem with biological evolution, development and plasticity, provid
37  cultural inventions had feedback effects on biological evolution due to their impact on social bondi
38 ns poorly resolved despite its importance to biological evolution/extinction and biogeochemical cycli
39                                              Biological evolution has led to precise and dynamic nano
40 hat RNA and DNA are products of chemical and biological evolution has motivated our search for altern
41                                              Biological evolution has parallels with the development
42                                              Biological evolution has struggled to produce mechanisms
43 tural evolution must be considered alongside biological evolution in explanations of language origins
44 olutionary pathways describe trajectories of biological evolution in the space of different variants
45 s system lesions in Leigh syndrome and their biological evolution in view of their genetic and clinic
46  show that they entail the major features of biological evolution, including replication and natural
47 systems in an attempt to outline a theory of biological evolution, including the origin of life, as m
48                   Human language arises from biological evolution, individual learning, and cultural
49 d "their recognition" are acquired (e.g., by biological evolution, individual learning, social learni
50 s could have served as a seed for subsequent biological evolution involving gene duplications and div
51 w statistical approaches for the analysis of biological evolution is challenging widely held beliefs
52 ingent product of one specific experiment in biological evolution, is likely to reflect common patter
53 2 are carbon sources in the initial stage of biological evolution of cells leading to life's origin.
54 ural evolution of vocabulary systems and the biological evolution of learning rules for vocabulary ac
55 n the form of flaked stone artifacts-and the biological evolution of our ancestors.
56 e the cultural evolution of language and the biological evolution of universal grammar.
57 sically improbable in the time available for biological evolution on Earth.
58 e (within the present framework) scenario of biological evolution on holey landscapes assuming that i
59 matic step towards a better understanding of biological evolution on our planet.
60 lyzing the controlling factors and impact of biological evolution over a wide range of temporal and s
61 n help refine the time scale of physical and biological evolution over the past 100,000 years.
62 t kinds are known to have affected long-term biological evolution, particularly during major mass ext
63 re we show how genetic algorithms, mimicking biological evolution ('survival of the fittest'), can be
64                                          All biological evolution takes place in a space of possible
65    Understanding the links between long-term biological evolution, the ocean-atmosphere system and pl
66 c oxygen has driven environmental change and biological evolution throughout much of Earth's history
67                Here, we borrow concepts from biological evolution to create a vortex pinning genome b
68 IS has not benefited from 4 billion years of biological evolution to create AEGIS-specialized enzymes
69               Models linking trends in early biological evolution to shifts in Earth system processes
70                               The process of biological evolution via random mutation and subsequent
71 uch more common in manuscript evolution than biological evolution, we were able to reconstruct most o
72 e-leader dynamic in firm cost efficiency and biological evolution, whereas scientific progress reflec
73 model that recapitulates several features of biological evolution, while being based only on thermall