Neontology is a part of biology that, in contrast to paleontology, studies and deals with living (or, more generally, recent) organisms. It is the study of extant taxa (singular: extant taxon): taxa (such as species, genera and families) with members still alive, as opposed to (all) being extinct. For example: The Indian elephant (Elephas maximus) is an extant species, and the woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) is an extinct species. The moose (Alces alces) is an extant species, and the Irish elk (Megaloceros giganteus) is an extinct species. In the group of molluscs known as the ceph
Neontologi är det biologiska studiet av idag levande organismer, eller mer generellt, organismer som förekommer under holocen. Det är studiet av nu levande taxa, som arter, släkten och familjer, i motsats till studiet av taxa där alla arter är utdöda, det vill säga paleontologi.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).