Figure 1: Map of present-day New Guinea with major tectonic features and collecting localities for sequenced Exocelina specimens. | Nature Communications

Figure 1: Map of present-day New Guinea with major tectonic features and collecting localities for sequenced Exocelina specimens.

From: The towering orogeny of New Guinea as a trigger for arthropod megadiversity

Figure 1

Filled circles indicate localities from which at least one specimen of Exocelina was collected. Purple shading indicates continental terranes, red indicates oceanic arc terranes, brown indicates old terranes, and bright blue and yellow areas indicate the mobile and fold belts, respectively. The wide white area represents the Australian craton-stable platform.

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