Publications by authors named "Nicole Garrett"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the assembly of C grassland ecosystems in Africa and their significance for understanding the evolution of mammals, particularly hominins.
  • It challenges the idea that C grasses only became dominant in Africa after 10 million years ago by providing evidence of their presence in vegetation from around 21 to 16 million years ago.
  • The findings suggest a more complex ecological landscape during the Early Miocene, with diverse habitats that require a re-evaluation of previous assumptions about mammalian evolution in relation to these grasslands.
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Purpose: Administrative claims data provide real-world service utilization of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) treatment, but lacks insight into treatment delays or barriers. The National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP)/Be The Match Search (Search) data contains information on donor search, but lacks information on treatment received if allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) is not performed. We hypothesized that linking these two data sets would create a rich resource to define factors associated with receiving HCT that could not be evaluated with either data set alone.

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Paleoanthropologists have long argued that environmental pressures played a key role in human evolution. However, our understanding of how these pressures mediated the behavioral and biological diversity of early modern humans and their migration patterns within and out of Africa is limited by a lack of archaeological evidence associated with detailed paleoenvironmental data. Here, we present the first stable isotopic data from paleosols and fauna associated with Middle Stone Age (MSA) sites in East Africa.

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DNA recombination reactions (site-specific and homologous) were monitored in the progeny of transgenic maize plants by bringing together two recombination substrates (docking sites and shuttle vectors) in the zygotes. In one combination of transgenic events, the recombination marker gene (yellow fluorescent protein gene, YFP) was activated in 1%-2% of the zygotes receiving both substrates. In other crosses, chimeric embryos and plants were identified, indicative of late recombination events taking place after the first mitotic division of the zygotes.

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