This study is aimed at showing that the fractal geometry of taxonomic systems (Burlando, 1990) reflects self-similar evolutionary pattern. Evidence is achieved by three steps: (i) examination of taxonomic data from the fossil record; (ii) examination of taxonomic data from phylogenetic systematics;
β¦ LIBER β¦
The geometry of the complement of a fractal set
β Scribed by Claude Tricot
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 341 KB
- Volume
- 114
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0375-9601
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The Fractal Geometry of Evolution
β
Bruno Burlando
π
Article
π
1993
π
Elsevier Science
π
English
β 308 KB
On the fractal dimensions of a combined
β
F.H. Ling
π
Article
π
1989
π
Elsevier Science
π
English
β 312 KB
Measuring the fractal geometry of landsc
β
Bruce T. Milne
π
Article
π
1988
π
Elsevier Science
π
English
β 843 KB
The fractal geometry of the soilβcovered
β
W. E. H. Culling; Mark Datko
π
Article
π
1987
π
John Wiley and Sons
π
English
β 1000 KB
The complement of certain recursively de
β
D Coppersmith
π
Article
π
1975
π
Elsevier Science
π
English
β 566 KB
An independent dominating set in the com
β
Michael A. Henning; Christian LΓΆwenstein; Dieter Rautenbach
π
Article
π
2010
π
Elsevier Science
π
English
β 267 KB
We prove that for every tree T of order at least 2 and every minimum dominating set D of T which contains at most one endvertex of T , there is an independent dominating set I of T which is disjoint from D. This confirms a recent conjecture of Johnson, Prier, and Walsh.