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John T. Clarke

Researcher at University of Oxford

Publications -  4
Citations -  441

John T. Clarke is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reproduction (economics) & Coating. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 402 citations. Previous affiliations of John T. Clarke include University of Pennsylvania & University of Bristol.

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Establishing a time-scale for plant evolution

TL;DR: A post-Jurassic origin of angiosperms and a post-Cambrian origin of land plants are rejected, and it is suggested that the establishment of the major embryophyte lineages occurred at a much slower tempo than suggested in most previous studies.
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Little evidence for enhanced phenotypic evolution in early teleosts relative to their living fossil sister group

TL;DR: Quantifying evolutionary rate and capacity for innovation in size and shape for the first 160 million y (Permian–Early Cretaceous) of evolution in neopterygian fishes finds that early teleosts do not show enhanced phenotypic evolution relative to holosteans, belying the living fossil reputation of their extant representatives.
Patent

Medical devices with coatings for delivery of a therapeutic agent

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe implantable coated medical devices comprising a substrate having a surface, and a coating disposed upon the surface that comprises a coating composition that includes a releasable metal oxide.
Journal ArticleDOI

The history of three scientific societies: the Society for the Study of Fertility (now the Society for Reproduction and Fertility) (Britain), the Société Française pour l'Etude de la Fertilité, and the Society for the Study of Reproduction (USA)

TL;DR: Three scientific societies devoted to the study of reproduction were established in Britain, France and USA in the middle of the twentieth century by clinical, veterinary and agricultural scientists, with a wider perspective embracing other biologists interested in reproduction more generally.