Bio = "life" geo = "earth" and graphy = "writing/field of study"
Biogeography is the study of the geographic and historical distribution of species. Biogeography studies where organisms are distributed throughout the biosphere, how abundant they are in certain areas, why they are (or are not) found in certain geographic areas, and where they lived in the past.
C. Barry Cox has written: 'Biogeography' -- subject(s): Biogeography, Ecology 'Biogeography' 'Biogeography' 'Biogeography: an ecological and evolutionary approach' -- subject(s): Biogeography, Ecology 'Prehistoric Life'
Journal of Biogeography was created in 1974.
Biogeography is the study of the distribution of species and ecosystems in geographical space and throughout geological time.
Mihails Gailis has written: 'Biogeography' -- subject(s): Biogeography
Discipline of biogeography that explains the distributions of organisms in terms of spreading across former barriers.
Ecological biogeograpy
Peter J. Vincent has written: 'A biogeography of the British Isles' -- subject(s): Biogeography
Caves are a type of island ecosystem according to the theory of island biogeography.
Your answer is in your categories. Its paleontology, or biogeography.
Biogeography is concerned with the location of fossils and living organisms. The prefix "bio" comes from the Greek word for life.
The study of the distribution of living things across Earth is called biogeography. It explores the patterns and processes that shape where different species occur and why they are distributed in specific regions. Biogeography incorporates elements of biology, ecology, geology, and climatology to understand how and why species are distributed the way they are.
The study of where organisms live is called ecology. It focuses on how organisms interact with their environment and with each other in specific locations.