Published March 5, 2025
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Figureȱ1.ȱMountainsȱofȱNewȱGuineaȱ(fig.ȱ1ȱinȱDiamondȱ&ȱBishopȱ2021b).ȱTheȱCentralȱRangeȱisȱcross-hatched.ȱ In solid black and named are ten outlying mountain ranges, detached from the Central Range and rising from the lowlands along New Guinea's north and north-west coasts. One of those ten ranges, the Cyclops Mts., is the subject of this paper. During Pleistocene cold phases of low sea level, the current Arafura Sea was a large exposed platform joining southern New Guinea and its Fly River bulge to northern Australia. The Aru Islands remain above sea level today, as a surviving modern fragment of that platform. Similarly, Yapen Island remains above sea level as a surviving modern fragment of a platform exposed during the Pleistocene offȱnorth-westȱNewȱGuinea. in Why are New Guinea's Cyclops Mountains poor in upland bird species?
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Figureȱ1.ȱMountainsȱofȱNewȱGuineaȱ(fig.ȱ1ȱinȱDiamondȱ&ȱBishopȱ2021b).ȱTheȱCentralȱRangeȱisȱcross-hatched.ȱ In solid black and named are ten outlying mountain ranges, detached from the Central Range and rising from the lowlands along New Guinea's north and north-west coasts. One of those ten ranges, the Cyclops Mts., is the subject of this paper. During Pleistocene cold phases of low sea level, the current Arafura Sea was a large exposed platform joining southern New Guinea and its Fly River bulge to northern Australia. The Aru Islands remain above sea level today, as a surviving modern fragment of that platform. Similarly, Yapen Island remains above sea level as a surviving modern fragment of a platform exposed during the Pleistocene offȱnorth-westȱNewȱGuinea.
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- Journal article: 10.25226/bboc.v145i1.2025.a6 (DOI)
- Journal article: urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FF91405AFFDF3A1F06385304FFB3D741 (LSID)
- Journal article: http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF91405AFFDF3A1F06385304FFB3D741 (URL)
- Journal article: https://zenodo.org/record/20290869 (URL)