Romer's gap

(noun)

A period in the tetrapod fossil record (360 to 345 million years ago) from which excavators have not yet found relevant fossils.

Related Terms

  • transitional fossil

Examples of Romer's gap in the following topics:

  • Gaps in the Fossil Record

    • Romer's gap is an example of an apparent gap in the tetrapod fossil record used in the study of evolutionary biology.
    • These gaps represent periods from which no relevant fossils have been found.
    • Romer's gap is named after paleontologist Alfred Romer, who first recognized it.
    • Romer's gap spanned from approximately 360 to 345 million years ago, corresponding to the first 15 million years of the Carboniferous Period.
    • The bank of the Whiteadder Water in Scotland is one of the few known localities bearing fossils of tetrapods from Romer's gap.
  • Intercellular Junctions

    • Plasmodesmata are junctions between plant cells, whereas animal cell contacts are carried out through tight junctions, gap junctions, and desmosomes.
    • Lastly, similar to plasmodesmata in plant cells, gap junctions are the third type of direct junction found within animal cells.
    • Structurally, however, gap junctions and plasmodesmata differ.
    • Gap junctions are particularly important in cardiac muscle.
    • The electrical signal for the muscle to contract is passed efficiently through gap junctions, which allows the heart muscle cells to contract in tandem.
  • Interphase

    • The first stage of interphase is called the G1 phase (first gap) because, from a microscopic aspect, little change is visible.
  • Forms of Signaling

    • There are four categories of chemical signaling found in multicellular organisms: paracrine signaling, endocrine signaling, autocrine signaling, and direct signaling across gap junctions .
    • Gap junctions in animals and plasmodesmata in plants are connections between the plasma membranes of neighboring cells.
    • The distance between the presynaptic cell and the postsynaptic cell—called the synaptic gap—is very small and allows for rapid diffusion of the neurotransmitter.
    • In chemical signaling, a cell may target itself (autocrine signaling), a cell connected by gap junctions, a nearby cell (paracrine signaling), or a distant cell (endocrine signaling).
    • Signaling via gap junctions involves signaling molecules moving directly between adjacent cells.
  • Complex Tissue Structure

    • As multicellular organisms, animals differ from plants and fungi because their cells don't have cell walls; their cells may be embedded in an extracellular matrix (such as bone, skin, or connective tissue); and their cells have unique structures for intercellular communication (such as gap junctions).
  • Types of Leaf Forms

    • The leaf shape may also be formed of lobes where the gaps between lobes do not reach to the main vein.
  • ATP and Muscle Contraction

    • As soon as the actin-binding sites are uncovered, the high-energy myosin head bridges the gap, forming a cross-bridge.
  • Neurons

    • Along these types of axons, there are periodic gaps in the myelin sheath.
    • These gaps, called "nodes of Ranvier," are sites where the signal is "recharged" as it travels along the axon.
  • DNA Replication in Prokaryotes

    • The primers are removed by the exonuclease activity of DNA pol I, while the gaps are filled in by deoxyribonucleotides.
    • DNA ligase seals the gaps between the Okazaki fragments, joining the fragments into a single DNA molecule.
  • DNA Repair

    • Once the bases are filled in, the remaining gap is sealed with a phosphodiester linkage catalyzed by DNA ligase .
    • The gap is now filled with the correctly-paired base.
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