UNLV -
led research team ties spike in ancient oceanic oxygen levels to earliest animal biodiversity; findings reported in Sept. 27 issue of journal Nature.
Not exact matches
The effect seems to also hold for other animals: In 2003, a
research team led by anthropologist Joan Silk of the University of California, Los Angeles, reported that female baboons with close social
ties to unrelated females produce infants that survive longer.
Dr Stan Burgess, at the University of Leeds» School of Molecular and Cellular Biology, who
led the
research team, said: «Dynein has two identical motors
tied together and it moves along a molecular track called a microtubule.