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  <title>universe,Late Carboniferous Terrestrial Maturation and the Pre-Permian Landscape</title>
  <description> By the late Devonian period, life on Earth had forcefully established itself in both submarine and incipient terrestrial surroundings, yet the true subjection of the land was only beginning. The first amphibians, descendants of lobe- finned fish that had gradationally acclimated to shallow water and muddy plages, marked a vital moment in elaboration. These brutes, frequently small and heavily reliant on humidity for survival and reduplication, developed robust branches and rudimentary lungs, allowing them to navigate both water and land. Their movements were slow and deliberate at first, constrained by graveness and the need to maintain&amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Universe</author_name>
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