PUBLICATIONS


Barnosky, A. D. 2001. Distinguishing the effects of the Red Queen and Court Jester on Miocene mammal evolution in the Northern Rocky Mountains. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 21:172-185. Download a reprint (Acrobat .pdf)

Barnosky, A. D. 2001. Notes on Miocene biochronology in the Northern Rocky Mountains, Pp. 102-104 in Guidebook for the Field Trips, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 61st Annual Meeting, Mesozoic and Cenozoic Paleontology in the Western Plains and Rocky Mountains, Museum of the Rockies Occasional Paper no. 3, (C. L. Hill, ed.), Bozeman, Montana. E-mail the author for a reprint

Barnosky, A. D., and M. A. Carrasco. 2002. Effects of Oligo-Miocene global climate changes on mammalian species richness in the northwestern quarter of the USA . Evolutionary Ecology Research 4:811-841. Download a reprint (Acrobat .pdf)

Barnosky, A. D., E. A. Hadly, and C. J. Bell. 2003. Mammalian response to global warming on varied temporal scales. Journal of Mammalogy 84(2):354-368. Download a reprint (Acrobat .pdf)

Barnosky, A.D. and C.J. Bell. 2003. Evolution, climatic change and species boundaries: perspectives from tracing Lemmiscus curtatus populations through time and space. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 270:2585-2590. * Download a reprint (Acrobat .pdf)

Barnosky, A. D., C. J. Bell, S. D. Emslie, H. T. Goodwin, J. I. Mead, C. A. Repenning, E. Scott and A. B. Shabel. 2004. Exceptional record of mid-Pleistocene vertebrates helps differentiate climatic from anthropogenic ecosystem perturbations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 101:9297-9302. Download a reprint (Acrobat .pdf)

Barnosky, A. D. (ed.) 2004. Biodiversity response to climate change in the middle Pleistocene. University of California Press, Berkeley, 385 pp. Order a copy of the book

Barnosky, A. D. 2004. Climate change, biodiversity, and ecosystem health: the past as a key to future. Pp. 3-5 in Biodiversity Response to Climate Change in the Middle Pleistocene (A.D. Barnosky, ed). University of California Press, Berkeley. Order a copy of the book

Barnosky, A. D. 2004. Effect of climate change on terrestrial vertebrate biodiversity. Pp.341-346 in Biodiversity Response to Climate Change in the Middle Pleistocene (A.D. Barnosky, ed). University of California Press, Berkeley. Order a copy of the book

Barnosky, A. D., P. L. Koch, R. S. Feranec, S. L. Wing, and A. B. Shabel. 2004. Assessing the Causes of Late Pleistocene Extinctions on the Continents. Science 306:70-75. Download a reprint

Barnosky, A. D. 2005. Effects of Quaternary climatic change on speciation in mammals, Journal of Mammalian Evolution 12:247-256. Download a reprint

Barnosky, A. D. and A. B. Shabel. 2005. Comparison of species richness and ecological structure in historic and middle Pleistocene Colorado mountain mammal communities. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 56(Supp. 1):50-61. Download a reprint

Barnosky, A.D., M. A. Carrasco and E. B. Davis. 2005. The impact of the species-area relationship on estimates of paleodiversity. PLoS Biology 3:e-266, p. 1-5.Download a reprint

Barnosky, A. D., F. Bibi, R. Nichols and S. S. B. Hopkins. 2007. Biostratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy of the mid-Miocene Railroad Canyon Sequence, Montana And Idaho, and age of the mid-Tertiary unconformity west of the continental divide. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27(1):204-224. Download a reprint

Barnosky, A. D. 2008. Megafauna biomass tradeoff as a driver of Quaternary and future extinctions. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 105:11543-11548. Download a reprint

Barnosky, A. D. 2008. Climatic change, refugia, and biodiversity: where do we go from here? An editorial comment. Climatic Change 86:29-32. Download a reprint

Barnosky, A. D. 2009. Heatstroke, Nature in an Age of Global Warming. Island Press, Washington, D. C. 288 pp. Order a copy of the book

Carrasco, M. A., Barnosky, A. D., Kraatz, B. P., and E. B. Davis.  2007.  The Miocene mammal mapping project (MIOMAP): an online database of Arikareean through Hemphillian fossil mammals.  Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History 39:183-188. Download a reprint

Carrasco, M. A., A. D. Barnosky, and R. W. Graham. 2009. Quantifying the extent of North American mammal extinction relative to the pre-anthropogenic baseline. PLoS One 4(12):e8331. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0008331 Download a reprint

Davis, E. B. 2005. Comparison of climate space and phylogeny of Marmota (Mammalia: Rodentia) indicates a connection between evolutionary history and climate preference. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 272:519-526. Download a reprint

Davis, E. B. 2005. Mammalian beta diversity in the Great Basin, western USA: palaeontological data suggest deep origin of modern macroecological structure.Global Ecology and Biogeography 14:479-490 Download a reprint

Feranec, R. S., A. D. Barnosky, and C. Quang. 2005. New populations and biogeographic patterns of the geomyid rodents Lignimus and Mojavemys from the Barstovian of Western Montana. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25(4):962-975. Download a reprint

Hopkins, S. S. B. 2004. Phylogeny and biogeography of the genus Ansomys (Mammalia: Rodentia: Aplodontidae) and description of a new species from the Barstovian (Mid-Miocene) of Montana. Journal of Paleontology 78(4):731-740.Download a reprint (Acrobat .pdf)

Hopkins, S. S. B. 2005. The evolution of fossoriality and the adaptive role of horns in the Mylagaulidae (Mammalia: Rodentia). Proceedings of the Royal Society B 272:1705–1713. Download a reprint

Koch, P. L., and A. D. Barnosky. 2006. Late Quaternary extinctions: State of the debate. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 37:215-250. Download a reprint

Kraatz, B. P., and A. D. Barnosky. 2004. Barstovian ochotonids from Hepburn's Mesa, Park County, Montana with comments on the biogeography and phylogeny of Oreolagus. Bulletin of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History 36:121-136. Download a reprint

Use of this resource in publications should be cited as:
Carrasco, M.A., B.P. Kraatz, E.B. Davis, and A.D. Barnosky. 2005. Miocene Mammal Mapping Project (MIOMAP). University of California Museum of Paleontology https://ucmp.berkeley.edu/miomap/