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Examples

  • Phylogenetic trees are formed by branchings, not natural selection.

    About 'What Darwin Got Wrong' 2010

  • Phylogenetic trees are formed by the imaginations of human beings sorting things.

    About 'What Darwin Got Wrong' 2010

  • Zachriel: Phylogenetic trees are formed by branchings, not natural selection. angryoldfatman: Phylogenetic trees are formed by the imaginations of human beings sorting things.

    About 'What Darwin Got Wrong' 2010

  • Phylogenetic analyses showed that EBLNs seem to have been generated by different insertional events in each specific animal family.

    A New Wrinkle on Parasitic Elements 2010

  • And I read a good deal of the latest issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, including "Redescription and Phylogenetic Relationships of Doswellia kaltenbachi (Diapsida: Archosauriformes) from the Upper Triassic of Virginia," "Utility and Validity of Middle and Late Triassic 'Land Vertebrate Faunachrons,'" and "The Skull of Teleosaurus cadomensis (Crocodylomorpha; Thalattosuchia), and Phylogenetic Analysis of Thalattosuchia."

    "A forest's son, a river's daughter..." greygirlbeast 2009

  • Phylogenetic trees are formed by the imaginations of human beings sorting things.

    About 'What Darwin Got Wrong' 2010

  • Phylogenetic trees are formed by branchings, not natural selection.

    About 'What Darwin Got Wrong' 2010

  • Here's a whole gaggle of 'em: The Hennig Society was founded in 1980 with the expressed purpose of promoting the field of Phylogenetic Systematics.

    A New Book 2010

  • Phylogenetic trees are essential tools for representing evolutionary relationships.

    The Panda's Thumb: Improving science education Archives 2010

  • Phylogenetic trees are the most conventional tool for displaying evolutionary relationships, and “tree-thinking” has been coined as a term to describe the ability to conceptualize evolutionary relationships.

    The Panda's Thumb: Improving science education Archives 2010

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