Steven M. Stanley
#19,791
Most Influential Person Now
American paleontologist
Steven M. Stanley's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
Steven M. Stanleybiology Degrees
Biology
#1016
World Rank
#1752
Historical Rank
#537
USA Rank
Paleontology
#24
World Rank
#47
Historical Rank
#18
USA Rank
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Earth Sciences Biology
Why Is Steven M. Stanley Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Steven M. Stanley is an American paleontologist and evolutionary biologist at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. He is best known for his empirical research documenting the evolutionary process of punctuated equilibrium in the fossil record.
Steven M. Stanley's Published Works
Published Works
- Relation of Shell Form to Life Habits of the Bivalvia (Mollusca) (1970) (841)
- Secular oscillations in the carbonate mineralogy of reef-building and sediment-producing organisms driven by tectonically forced shifts in seawater chemistry (1998) (750)
- Macroevolution: Pattern and Process (1979) (673)
- A theory of evolution above the species level. (1975) (609)
- AN EXPLANATION FOR COPE'S RULE (1973) (587)
- A Double Mass Extinction at the End of the Paleozoic Era (1994) (409)
- Functional morphology and evolution of byssally attached bivalve mollusks (1972) (331)
- An ecological theory for the sudden origin of multicellular life in the late precambrian. (1973) (232)
- Post-Paleozoic adaptive radiation of infaunal bivalve molluscs; a consequence of mantle fusion and siphon formation (1968) (221)
- Estimates of the magnitudes of major marine mass extinctions in earth history (2016) (206)
- Anatomy of a regional mass extinction; Plio-Pleistocene decimation of the western Atlantic bivalve fauna (1986) (193)
- Influence of seawater chemistry on biomineralization throughout phanerozoic time: Paleontological and experimental evidence (2006) (174)
- Hypercalcification: Paleontology Links Plate Tectonics and Geochemistry to Sedimentology (1999) (165)
- An Analysis of the History of Marine Animal Diversity (2007) (154)
- Population size, extinction, and speciation: the fission effect in Neogene Bivalvia (1986) (153)
- Earth System History (1998) (152)
- Chapter 7 Trends, Rates, and Patterns of Evolution in the Bivalvia (1977) (148)
- Evidence from ammonoids and conodonts for multiple Early Triassic mass extinctions (2009) (137)
- Low-magnesium calcite produced by coralline algae in seawater of Late Cretaceous composition (2002) (134)
- Temperature and biotic crises in the marine realm (1984) (128)
- Depressed rates of origination and extinction during the late Paleozoic ice age: A new state for the global marine ecosystem (2003) (116)
- Approximate evolutionary stasis for bivalve morphology over millions of years: a multivariate, multilineage study (1987) (114)
- Climatic cooling and mass extinction of Paleozoic reef communities (1988) (113)
- Predation defeats competition on the seafloor (2008) (112)
- Earth and life through time (1986) (112)
- Scleractinian corals produce calcite, and grow more slowly, in artificial Cretaceous seawater (2006) (111)
- Seawater chemistry, coccolithophore population growth, and the origin of Cretaceous chalk (2005) (108)
- Neogene mass extinction of Western Atlantic molluscs (1981) (104)
- Effects of Competition on Rates of Evolution, with Special Reference to Bivalve Mollusks and Mammals (1973) (103)
- An ecological theory for the origin of Homo (1992) (101)
- Paleozoic mass extinctions; shared patterns suggest global cooling as a common cause (1988) (101)
- Biogeographic patterns and Plio-Pleistocene extinction of Bivalvia in the Mediterranean and southern North Sea (1985) (100)
- Fossil data and the Precambrian-Cambrian evolutionary transition (1976) (96)
- Why clams have the shape they have: an experimental analysis of burrowing (1975) (83)
- Natural clades differ from “random” clades: simulations and analyses (1981) (82)
- Competitive exclusion in evolutionary time: the case of the acorn barnacles (1980) (82)
- Clades versus clones in evolution: why we have sex (1975) (78)
- Macroevolutionary differences between the two major clades of Neogene planktonic foraminifera (1988) (75)
- Effects of global seawater chemistry on biomineralization: past, present, and future. (2008) (72)
- Infaunal survival: alternative functions of shell ornamentation in the Bivalvia (Mollusca) (1981) (70)
- Chronospecies' longevities, the origin of genera, and the punctuational model of evolution (1978) (69)
- MACROEVOLUTION AND THE FOSSIL RECORD (1982) (68)
- Delayed recovery and the spacing of major extinctions (1990) (67)
- The new evolutionary timetable: fossils, genes, and the origin of species (1981) (62)
- Relation of Phanerozoic stable isotope excursions to climate, bacterial metabolism, and major extinctions (2010) (60)
- Bivalve Mollusk Burrowing Aided by Discordant Shell Ornamentation (1969) (60)
- Rates of evolution (1988) (55)
- 5 – Adaptive Morphology of the Shell in Bivalves and Gastropods (1988) (51)
- Increased Production of Calcite and Slower Growth for the Major Sediment-Producing Alga Halimeda as the Mg/Ca Ratio of Seawater is Lowered to a “Calcite Sea” Level (2010) (42)
- Ideas on the timing of metazoan diversification (1976) (41)
- Paleoecology and Diagenesis of Key Largo Limestone, Florida (1966) (40)
- Aspects of the adaptive morphology and evolution of the Trigoniidae (1978) (34)
- New horizons for paleontology, with two examples: The rise and fall of the Cretaceous Supertethys and the cause of the modern ice age (1995) (34)
- Mass Extinctions in the Ocean (1984) (33)
- Evolutionary radiation of shallow-water Lucinidae (Bivalvia with endosymbionts) as a result of the rise of seagrasses and mangroves (2014) (27)
- Competition wins out overall: Reply to Paine (1981) (25)
- Lyellian curves in paleontology: Possibilities and limitations (1980) (25)
- Stability of species in geologic time. (1976) (24)
- Children of the Ice Age: How a Global Catastrophe Allowed Humans to Evolve (1996) (22)
- Thermal barriers and the fate of perched faunas (2010) (19)
- Exploring Earth And Life Through Time (1992) (18)
- RELATIVE GROWTH OF THE TITANOTHERE HORN: A NEW APPROACH TO AN OLD PROBLEM (1974) (14)
- Gastropod torsion: predation and the opercular imperative (1982) (11)
- Does Bradytely Exist (1984) (10)
- The empirical case for the punctuational model of evolution (1989) (10)
- Neotrigonia, the Sole Surviving Genus of the Trigoniidae (Bivalvia, Mollusca) (1984) (10)
- Memoir 4: An Analysis of the History of Marine Animal Diversity (2007) (8)
- The past climate change heats up. (2000) (7)
- Climatic cooling-and plio-pleistocene mass extinction of molluscs around the margins of the Atlantic (1985) (7)
- Living Fossils: Introduction to the Casebook (1984) (7)
- 8. Fossils, Macroevolution, and Theoretical Ecology (1989) (7)
- Speciation and the fossil record. (1982) (6)
- Evidence that more than a third of Paleozoic articulate brachiopod genera (Strophomenata) lived infaunally (2020) (5)
- Secular variation in Phanerozoic marine biocalcification and the original mineralogy and mode of calcification of receptaculitids: a reply (2001) (5)
- Krisen der Evolution (1988) (5)
- Treatise Online no. 71: Part N, Revised, Volume 1, Chapter 5: Functional Shell Morphology of Noncementing Bivalvia (2015) (4)
- Treatise Online no. 72: Part N, Revised, Volume 1, Chapter 19: Evolutionary Ecology of the Bivalvia (2015) (3)
- EVIDENCE THAT THE ARMS OF TYRANNOSAURUS REX WERE NOT FUNCTIONLESS BUT ADAPTED FOR VICIOUS SLASHING (2017) (3)
- Identifying vital effects in Halimeda algae with Ca isotopes (2014) (2)
- Geobiology of the Phanerozoic (2012) (2)
- Darwin Done Over (1981) (2)
- Time travelling (1988) (2)
- Presentation of the Charles Schuchert Award of The Paleontological Society to Donald R. Prothero (1992) (1)
- Periodic Mass Extinctions of the Earth's Species (1987) (1)
- Records of the early metazoans (1984) (1)
- ENVIRONMENTAL STRATIGRAPHY, PALEOECOLOGY, AND FATE OF THE HUMONGUS PINECREST BIVALVE FAUNA OF SARASOTA, FLORIDA (2014) (1)
- Species selection and the role of the individual (1988) (1)
- 6 Discursive Cyberpsychology: Rhetoric, Repression and the Loneliness of Talking the Internet (2001) (1)
- Government of the planet (1988) (1)
- EVOLUTION SOCIETY NEW (1982) (0)
- PNAS Plus Significance Statements (2016) (0)
- SHIFTING SANDS AROUND OAHU AND THE SPARSE FAUNA OF SHALLOW-WATER INFAUNAL BIVALVES (2017) (0)
- MORE THAN A THIRD OF PALEOZOIC BRACHIOPOD GENERA LIVED INFAUNALLY -- REALLY! (2016) (0)
- Fossils and funding (1989) (0)
- Production of Calcite by the Green Alga Halimeda in Artificial Cretaceous Seawater (2006) (0)
- Controls on Rates of Evolution (2007) (0)
- Evolution and Uniformitarianism: ABSTRACT (1978) (0)
- Presentation of the Paleontological Society Medal to Alfred G. Fischer (1996) (0)
- A Theory of Evolution Above the Species (paleontology/paleobiology/speciation) (2016) (0)
- Ocean Circulation: Conveyor of Past and Future Climate (2018) (0)
- BARRIER-ISLAND-LAGOON COMPLEXES AND MARINE TRANSGRESSIONS: AL FISHER’S BARNEGAT BAY STORY AND THE CONTRASTING HISTORY OF THE PLIOCENE PINECREST FORMATION OF FLORIDA (2019) (0)
- MASS EXTINCTIONS: LESS SEVERE IN THE OCEAN THAN TRADITIONALLY PORTRAYED BUT STILL INTRIGUING (2012) (0)
- The Planning and Execution of Economic Development by Louis J. Walinsky New York, McGraw Hill, 1963. Pp. xiii+ 248. $7.50. (1964) (0)
- SIGNIFICANT PHYLETIC EVOLUTION IS VERY RARE: EVOLUTION HAS BEEN PREDOMINANTLY PUNCTUATIONAL (2022) (0)
- Presentation of the Paleontological Society Medal to Alfred G. Fischer (1996) (0)
- Presentation of the Paleontological Society Medal to David M. Raup (1998) (0)
- GENAL SPINES FUNCTIONED TO ALLOW TRILOBITES TO RIGHT THEMSELVES AFTER BEING OVERTURNED STANLEY (2018) (0)
- A Primer of Population Biology [book review] (1974) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Steven M. Stanley?
Steven M. Stanley is affiliated with the following schools: