systematics

[ US /ˌsɪstəˈmætɪks/ ]
NOUN
  1. the science of systematic classification
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use systematics In A Sentence

  • Yet the majority of the book emphasizes dinosaur osteology, systematics, and the fossil record; paleobiology takes a back seat to this important foundation.
  • My prejudiced systematics lumps them with dodos, on the far side of things: they are primitives, throwbacks, dead ends, clumsies, shufflers and waddlers, kickers and swimmers, not flyers. A Year on the Wing
  • Mike used three examples of a correction of paleontology by molecular systematics and vice versa to show that both disciplines need each other.
  • She then moved to the American Museum of Natural History in New York for postdoctoral work on the systematics, biogeography, and conservation of Caribbean birds.
  • Mathematically trained, he was interested both in systematics and biometry.
  • These include natural history, distribution and systematics, population dynamics, physiology, parasitology and pathology, community structure, research methods, and behavior.
  • Niwa has active programmes in biosystematics - the crucial science of naming, classifying, and describing life that underpins all biodiversity studies.
  • Explicit, universal meanings are critical if paleontology is to play a central role in systematics and evolutionary biology.
  • His work marks the starting point for much of modern biological systematics. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Over the past ten years, cladistics and molecular systematics have begun to be applied to solve problems of bivalve evolutionary biology.
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy