- taken & adapted from Hillis et al (1996), Majerus et 
        al (1996) and Walker (1989)
      
        Gaps: Editing symbols that are inserted into sequences in the 
          process of alignment in order to compensate for presumptive insertion 
          and deletion events. 
        Gel electrophoresis: A technique used to detect differences 
          in proteins and polypeptide chains based on differences in the size 
          and electrical charges of the molecules.
         Gene flow: Genetic exchange between populations resulting from 
          the dispersal of gametes, zygotes or individuals.
         
         Genome: The entire complement of genetic material in a cell.
         Genotype: The genetic make-up of an individual in respect of 
          one genetic locus, a group of loci or even its total genetic complement.
         
         Homology: Common ancestry of two or more genes or gene products.
         
         Homoplasy: A collection of phenomena that leads to similarities 
          in character states for reasons other than inheritance from a common 
          ancestor.
         Ingroup: An assumed monophyletic group, usually comprising 
          the taxa of primary interest.
         Jackknifing: A statistical method of numerical resampling based 
          on deleting a portion of the original observations in subsequent samples. 
        
        Maximum likelihood: A method of determining which of two or 
          more competing hypotheses (such as alternative phylogenetic trees) yields 
          best fits to the data. 
        Maximum parsimony: A criterion for estimating a parameter from 
          observed data based on the principle of minimising the number of events 
          needed to explain the data. In phylogenetic analysis, the optimal tree 
          under the maximum parsimony criterion is the tree that requires the 
          fewest number of character-state changes. 
        Mitochondrial DNA: The circular, double stranded genome of eukaryotic 
          mitochondria.
         Molecular clock: A theoretical clock based on the assumption 
          that the rates at which nucleotide (or amino acid) substitutions become 
          fixed in evolutionary lineages is approximately constant for a given 
          DNA sequence (or polypeptide chain) and reflects the time since data 
          diverged. 
        Molecular systematics: The detection, description, and explanation 
          of molecular biological diversity, both within and among species. 
        Monophyletic: A group of taxa that contains an ancestor and 
          all of its descendants.
         Mutation: Any change which alters the identity or order of 
          nucleotide bases within a chromosome.
         Natural selection: According to Charles Darwin, the main mechanism 
          giving rise to evolution. The mechanism by which heritable traits which 
          increase an organism's chances of survival and reproduction are more 
          likely to be passed on to the next generation than less advantageous 
          traits.
         Nucleotide base: The structural unit of a nucleic acid. The 
          major nucleotide bases in DNA are the purines adenine and guanine, and 
          the pyrimidines cytosine and thymine, of which the latter is replaced 
          by uracil in RNA.
         Orthology: Homology that arises through speciation.
         OUT: Operational taxonomic unit, usually synonymous with terminal 
          taxon.
         Outgroup: One or more taxa assumed to be phylogenetically outside 
          the ingroup.