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Nicole Bonuso
Researcher at California State University, Fullerton
Publications - 17
Citations - 953
Nicole Bonuso is an academic researcher from California State University, Fullerton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Holocene & Extinction event. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications receiving 855 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicole Bonuso include Syracuse University & University of Southern California.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Phanerozoic trends in the global diversity of marine invertebrates.
John Alroy,Martin Aberhan,David J. Bottjer,Michael Foote,Franz T. Fürsich,Peter J. Harries,Austin J.W. Hendy,Austin J.W. Hendy,Steven M. Holland,Linda C. Ivany,Wolfgang Kiessling,Matthew A. Kosnik,Charles R. Marshall,Alistair J. McGowan,Arnold I. Miller,Thomas D. Olszewski,Mark E. Patzkowsky,Shanan E. Peters,Shanan E. Peters,Loïc Villier,Peter J. Wagner,Nicole Bonuso,Nicole Bonuso,Philip S. Borkow,Benjamin Brenneis,Matthew E. Clapham,Matthew E. Clapham,Leigh M. Fall,Chad Allen Ferguson,Victoria L. Hanson,Victoria L. Hanson,Andrew Z. Krug,Andrew Z. Krug,Karen M. Layou,Karen M. Layou,Karen M. Layou,Erin Leckey,Sabine Nürnberg,Catherine M. Powers,Jocelyn A. Sessa,Jocelyn A. Sessa,Carl Simpson,Carl Simpson,Adam Tomašových,Adam Tomašových,Christy C. Visaggi,Christy C. Visaggi +46 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a new data set of fossil occurrences representing 3.5 million specimens was presented, and it was shown that global and local diversity was less than twice as high in the Neogene as in the mid-Paleozoic.
Journal ArticleDOI
Latest Pleistocene to Holocene hydroclimates from Lake Elsinore, California
TL;DR: In this paper, a new record from Lake Elsinore, located 36 km inland from the Pacific Ocean in Southern California and evaluated it in the context of records across the coastal and interior southwest United States, including northwest Mexico.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessing the ecological dominance of phanerozoic marine invertebrates
Matthew E. Clapham,David J. Bottjer,Catherine M. Powers,Nicole Bonuso,Margaret L. Fraiser,Pedro J. Marenco,Stephen Q. Dornbos,Sara B. Pruss +7 more
TL;DR: Large-scale dominance patterns often approximately matched those inferred from diversity trends; however, there are also times when dominance was decoupled from diversity, indicating that further investigation of ecological dominance will provide additional insights into ecological influences on the Phanerozoic history of life.
Journal ArticleDOI
Quantifying the dark data in museum fossil collections as palaeontology undergoes a second digital revolution
Charles R. Marshall,Seth Finnegan,Erica C. Clites,Patricia A. Holroyd,Nicole Bonuso,C. Cortez,Edward Byrd Davis,Gregory P. Dietl,Gregory P. Dietl,Patrick S. Druckenmiller,R. C. Eng,Christine N. Garcia,Kathryn Estes-Smargiassi,Austin J.W. Hendy,K. A. Hollis,Holly Little,Elizabeth A. Nesbitt,Peter D. Roopnarine,L. Skibinski,Jann E. Vendetti,Lisa D. White +20 more
TL;DR: Digitization of nine institutions' holdings of Cenozoic marine invertebrate collections from California, Oregon and Washington in the USA reveals that they represent 23 times the number of unique localities than are currently available in the PBDB.
Journal ArticleDOI
Statistical testing of community patterns: uppermost Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (New York State: USA)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an extensive and rigorously controlled quantitative paleoecological study within an interval of inferred coordinated stasis within the Middle Devonian Hamilton Group, and they evaluate various techniques, including non-parametric multidimensional scaling and agglomerative hierarchical clustering to decipher community patterns.