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Figure 8: Majority-Rule Consensus of Six Most Parsimonious Trees.
doi 10.7717/peerj.3311/fig-8
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Figure 6: Strict Consensus of Three Most Parsimonious Trees.
Figure 28: Reduced Consensus Tree From Our Phylogenetic Analysis After pruningXuanhanosaurususing 3,070 Most Parsimonious Trees.
Supplemental Information 5: Appendix 5: Figure Captions for 50% Majority Rule Consensus Trees From Phylogenetic Analysis.
Figure 2: (A) Maximum Parsimony Majority-Rule Consensus Tree; (B) Distance Tree; (C) Maximum Likelihood Tree; (D) Bayesian Majority-Rule Consensus Tree.
Figure 16: Strict Consensus of Eight Most Parsimonious Trees Resulting From Analysis That Includes Banhxeochelys Trani as the Only Active Fossil Species.
Figure 10: Strict Consensus of the 11 Most Parsimonious Trees Found in the Present Analysis, Not Showing Protorosaurus Speneri and Prolacerta Browni.
Figure 29: Strict Consensus Tree of 120 Most Parsimonious Trees of 1,269 Steps, a Consistency Index of 0.340 and a Retention Index of 0.630.
Figure 54: Strict Consensus Tree of 85 Most Parsimonious Trees (MPTs) of Length 1,264, a Retention Index of 0.636 and a Consistency Index of 0.346.
A Note on the Consensus Time of Mean-Field Majority-Rule Dynamics
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