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For Immediate Release
Contact: Greg Borzo
(312) 665-7100
gborzo@fieldmuseum.org
Field Museum plays key role in massive project to map Tree of Life
CHICAGOAn ambitious, multi-disciplinary, 15-20 year program to fill in and flesh out the Tree of Life has just been launched by the National Science Foundation.
Field Museum scientists will help lead three of the seven grants recently awarded to researchers around the world to construct a new framework for understanding the evolutionary relationships between all species, extinct and living.
These three projects (listed below) will focus on birds, spiders, and archosaurs (birds, dinosaurs, pterosaurs and crocodiles). They represent more than half the $12 million that NSF awarded for the first year of the Assembling the Tree of Life (AToL) program.
Darwins inspired vision of a grand Tree of Life with its ever-branching and beautiful ramifications has challenged scientists for generations. He speculated that all life forms from the smallest microorganism to the largest vertebrate are genetically related in a vast evolutionary tree. The tree imagery has prompted scientists to classify all organisms into groups and discern patterns of evolutionary and historical relationships that explain the similarities and differences between them.
Today, many branches of the Tree of Life remain unanalyzed, even unknown. AToL will address this problem, incorporating the flood of new information from genetic studies, fieldwork discoveries, and inventories of the earths biota with existing information.
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