Links for Palaeobotanists

An annotated collection of pointers to information on palaeobotany
or to WWW resources which may be of use to palaeobotanists (with an Upper Triassic bias).


What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists?

History of Palaeobotany
Renowned Palaeobotanists, Progress in Palaeobotany ...
Teaching Documents
Palaeobotany, Palaeontology, Palaeoecology, Field Trip Guides ...
Fossil and Recent Plant Taxa
Sphenophyta, Cycads, Bennettitales, Coniferophyta ...
Preservation & Taphonomy
Plant Taphonomy, Cuticles, Amber, Log Jams ...
Palaeobotanical Tools
Preparation, Photography, Translation Tools, AI Writing
Microscopy, Scient. Drawing, TEM, Microtomography ...
Institutions & Organisations
Selected Bot. Gardens and Herbaria, Nat. Hist. Museums,
Palaeobot. Collections, Internat. Palaeo Institutions ...
Conferences & List Server
Conferences, Mailing Lists, Newsgroups ...

Articles in Palaeobotany
Plant Evolution, What is Palaeobotany? Jurassic Palaeobotany ...
Plant Anatomy & Taxonomy
Plant Classification, Chemotaxonomy, Phylogeography, Cladistic Methods ...
Palynology
Palynological Associations, Acritarchs, Dinoflagellates, Palynofacies ...
Ecology & Palaeoenvironment
Stress Conditions, Palaeoenvironment, Ecosystem Recovery,
Palaeosoils, Plant Roots, Playa Lakes, Animal-Plant Interaction ...
Charcoal & Coal Petrology
Fossil charcoal, Fire Ecology, Coal Petrology, Coalification ...
Palaeoclimate
Stomatal Density, Rise of Oxygen, Pre-Neogene Growth Rings ...
Evolution & Extinction
Evolution Sciences vs Creationism, Molecular Clock, P-Tr Extinction ...
Selected Geology
Geological Timescale, Palaeogeography, Sedimentology, Gaia Hypothesis ...
Writing, Translating and Drawing
Translation Tools, Photoshop Tutorials ...
All about Upper Triassic
Triassic Palaeobotany, Tr. Palynology, Tr. Climate,
Triassic Stratigraphy, The European Keuper ...
Literature Search
Journals, Open Access Publishing, Abstracts, Books ...
Databases and Glossaries
Bot. Nomenclature, Encyclopedias, Unit Converter, Trees ...
Images of Plant Fossils
Fossil Plants, Reconstructions, Plant Photographs ...
Job & Experience
Labor Market, Grants, Field Camps, Internships ...
Search
AI-Search Engines Botany Search etc. Plagiarism S.
Palaeobotanical Directories, Palaeont. D., Bot. D. ...,










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What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists?


Q. Fu et al. (2024): Unique Jurassic ovaries shed a new light on the nature of carpels. Open access, Plants, 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants13162239.
"... A recently raised hypothesis stated that a carpel is a composite organ derived from an ovule-bearing axis and a subtending and enclosing leaf
[...] we report a new fruit/ovary, Xenofructus dabuensis gen. et sp. nov, from the Middle Jurassic of Liaoning, China. Surprisingly, these Jurassic ovaries clearly demonstrate the existence of free central placentation in early angiosperms. It appears that this new fossil provides a new insight into the evolution of placentation in angiosperms ..."

Gar W. Rothwell, Department of Environmental and Plant Biology, Ohio University, Athens: Angiophytes: Using Whole Plant Concepts to Interpret Angiosperm Origins.
Selected Literature.
Selected Examples. Images and reconstructions of Archaeanthus, Caloda reynoldsii, Joffrea speirsii, Polyptera manningii, Limnobiophyllum scutatum, Macginitea, Eorhiza/Princetonia.
Links archived by the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

S. Sarkar et al. (2024): Palynology and palynofacies analysis of the Subathu Formation (Early Ypresian-Middle Lutetian) of Morni Hills, Haryana, India. In PDF, Journal of Palaeosciences, 73: 2583–4266.

C.A. Jaramillo and F.E. Oboh-Ikuenobe (1999): Sequence stratigraphic interpretations from palynofacies, dinocyst and lithological data of Upper Eocene-Lower Oligocene strata in southern Mississippi and Alabama, U.S. Gulf Coast. PDF file, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 145: 259-302.
Still available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

Anna-Lena Anderberg, Department of Palaeobotany, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm:
Rhaetian and Jurassic plants of Scania. This database includes the Rhaetian and Jurassic plant fossils from Scania, southern Sweden, housed in the Stockholm collections.
Still available via Internet Archive Wayback Machine.

University of Oregon Eugene, OR.
! Electron Probe Micro Analysis Course Materials. This course (for Mineralogy, Petrology and Materials Science) is a laboratory course covering the theory and application of EPMA (electron probe micro analysis) and SEM (scanning electron microscopy) as an integrated and multi-disciplinary subject covering aspects of physics, chemistry, geology and statistics plus practical hands-on experience with the instruments themselves. See for example:
1 Introduction to the EPMA/SEM laboratory: An introduction to the technique followed by a short tour of the facilities, including discussion of lecture notes and suggested reading materials.
10 Statistics: The essential key to scientific analysis.
13 Digital Imaging (Lecture and Lab): Imaging and mapping: An overview of electron and x-ray imaging and mapping techniques.
Lecture notes, Powerpoint presentations.

S.P. Xie et al. (2009): Altitudinal variation in Ginkgo leaf characters: Clues to paleoelevation reconstruction. PDF file, Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences, 52: 2040-2046. See likewise here.
"... The results show that leaf area, petiole length, and stomatal parameters have no obvious linear relationship with altitude (...). The results also suggest that the differences in stomatal density and stomatal index between sun and shade leaves had more influence on paleoelevation reconstruction than that in other parameters ..."

A. Roth-Nebelsick (2007): Computer-based Studies of Diffusion through Stomata of Different Architecture. PDF file, Ann. Bot., 100: 23-32. See also here.
Recovered from the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

N. Gentis et al. (2024): First fossil woods and palm stems from the mid-Paleocene of Myanmar and implications for biogeography and wood anatomy. Open access, American Journal of Botany, 111.

C.T. Gee and M.M. Howell (2024): International Workshop on Fossilization. In PDF, Terra Nostra, DFG Research Unit FOR 2685 at the University of Bonn, Germany June 14-17, 2024.

T. Mesaglio et al. (2025): Citizen science records are fuelling exciting discoveries of new plant species. Open access, American Journal of Botany, 112.

! G. Jovanovski et al. (2023): Chemistry and geology of coal: nature, composition, coking, gasification, liquefaction, production of chemicals, formation, peatification, coalification, coal types, and ranks. In PDF ChemTexts, 9. See likewise here.
! Note figure 13: Scheme of formation of different coal types.
! Table 4: US coal rank system showing the parameters used to define ranks.

American Journal of Botany.
The American Journal of Botany (AJB), published by the Botanical Society, is the Society’s flagship research journal.

Marilyn Fox and Vicki Yarborough Fitzgerald:
A Review of Vertebrate Fossil Support (and storage) Systems at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. Powerpoint presentation.
This expired link is still available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências. Annals of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences.
See here as well.

F. Battista and C.L. Schultz (2024): Sampling and collector biases as taphonomic filters: an overview. Open access, Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 96. https://doi.org/10.1590/0001-3765202420231242. See also here (in PDF).
Note figure 1: Conceptual map of the factors determining biases in the fossil record and palaeontological collections.
Figure 2: Conceptual map of further anthropogenic biases that lead to the loss, even definitive, of taphonomic information and consequent biased results.

L.A. Vietti et al. (2015): Rapid formation of framboidal sulfides on bone surfaces from a simulated marine carcass-fall. In PDF, Palaios, 30: 327–334.
See likewise here.

Department of Geological Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO:
Web-based instruction. Annotated links to information on using the web to teach. Go to:
CzPaleobotany. See especially: Cenozoic Elevation of the Rocky Mountains, Paleobotanical Methods. About fossil classification (nearest living relative, physiognomy and CLAMP) and climate and elevation analysis.
These expired links are now available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

! C.C. Loron et al. (2025): Prototaxites was an extinct lineage of multicellular terrestrial eukaryotes bioRxiv, https://doi.org/10.1101/2025.03.14.643340.
"... We report that Prototaxites taiti was the largest organism in the Rhynie ecosystem and its anatomy was fundamentally distinct from all known extant or extinct fungi. Furthermore, our molecular composition analysis indicates that cell walls of P. taiti include aliphatic, aromatic, and phenolic components most similar to fossilisation products of lignin, but no fossilisation products characteristic of chitin or chitosan, which are diagnostic of all groups of extant and extinct fungi
[...] Prototaxites was not a fungus ..."

! S. Trümper et al. (2023): Decoding the drivers of deep-time wetland biodiversity: insights from an early Permian tropical lake ecosystem. Open access, Palaeontology, doi: 10.1111/pala.12652.
Note figure 17: 1 7 . Reconstruction of the Manebach Lake ecosystem.
"... We reconstruct the trophic structure and age of the early Permian Manebach Lake ecosystem, Germany
[...] The results indicate woody-debrisbearing lake littorals devoid of semi-aquatic and aquatic plants as places suitable for stromatolites to grow, underpin the model of declining freshwater-shark diversity in most Permian Variscan basins, demonstrate fish/amphibian ratios in limnic assemblages ..."

M. Haworth and J. McElwain (2008): Hot, dry, wet, cold or toxic? Revisiting the ecological significance of leaf and cuticular micromorphology. In PDF, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 262: 79–90. See also here.

L.I. Anderson and M. Taylor (2008): Charles W. Peach, Palaeobotany and Scotland (in PDF). The Geological Curator, 8: 393-425.
Thin sections of Devonian plants!

S.G. Razafimandimbison et al. (2025): Phylogeny and divergence times of the African and Malagasy Podocarpus (Podocarpaceae) and their taxonomic and biogeographic implications. Open access, Taxon. https://doi.org/10.1002/tax.70023.

! D. Chakrabarty (2018): Anthropocene time. Open access, History and Theory, 57: 5-32.
"... this article proceeds to discuss the differences between human-historical time and the time of geology as they relate to the concept of the Anthropocene ..."

J.E. Francis (1983): The dominant conifer of the Jurassic Purbeck formation, England.In PDF, Palaeontology, 26.
Note figure 3: Reconstruction of the dominant Purbeck conifer.
This expired link is still available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

University of California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley (with support provided by the National Science Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute):
Understanding Evolution. Understanding Evolution is a non-commercial, education website, teaching the science and history of evolutionary biology. Go to:
History of life on Earth. Topics are "From soup to cells - The origin of life", "Evolution and the fossil record", "Deep Time" (an interactive timeline), etc.
Still available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

D.M. Jarzen, Florida Museum of Natural History: Paleobotany Collection Policies.
Website saved by the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

J. Zalasiewicz et al. (2013): Chronostratigraphy and geochronology: A proposed realignment. In PDF, GSA Today, 23.

John Horgan, Scientific American: Life, Life Everywhere.
This expired link is still available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

! J.E.A. Marshall et al. (2025): Terrestrial palaeoclimate, mercury, atmospheric CO2 and land plants through the Late Devonian mass extinction. Free access, Journal of the Geological Society, 182.
"... a highly expanded terrestrial section from East Greenland is reported, which includes records of palaeoenvironment, palaeoclimate, carbon isotopes from plant debris, sedimentary mercury and plant spores
[...] The Heintzbjerg section is the first record from a terrestrial F-F [Frasnian–Famennian] Late Devonian mass extinction ..."

C.J. Cleal et al. (2024): Early coal swamp vegetation from the Serpukhovian lower Clackmannan Group of Scotland. Free access, Fossil Imprint, 80: 35–67.

M.J. Tyler et al. (2023): Calamities causing loss of museum collections: a historical and global perspective on museum disasters. In PDF, Zootaxa, 5230: 153–178. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5230.2.2. Note here as well.
"... We review the loss or damage of museum collections globally
[...] The significance of the loss of type material would be ameliorated if, when there are numerous paratypes or syntypes, members of a type series were distributed among several institutions. This is currently common practice but historically this was not always the case and might not be possible if only a single holotype is available ..."

Michael A. Kruge, Dept. of Geology Southern Illinois Univ., Carbondale, IL:
Chemistry Of Fossil Charcoal In Cretaceous-Tertiary Boundary Strata, Arroyo El Mimbral, Mexico.
The link is to a version archived by the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

Henry Potonié, (1901): Die Silur und die Culm-Flora des Harzes und des Magdeburgischen (in German).
The www.biolib.de project, Kurt Stüber, Max Planck Institut für Züchtungsforschung, Köln.
Images of Calamites.

P.E. Jardine et al. (2025): Which morphological traits can be used to reconstruct genome size in fossil plants? Assessing sporomorph size and stomatal guard cell length as paleo-genome size proxies. Open access, Paleobiology, 51: 378–391.
"... We show that sporomorph size has a complicated but mostly weak relationship with genome size, suggesting that it is a poor proxy to use in the fossil record. Stomatal guard cell length has a much stronger relationship with genome size, with the potential to provide accurate genome size estimates ..."

! A.M. Gurnell and W. Bertoldi (2024): Plants and river morphodynamics: the emergence of fluvial biogeomorphology. Open access, River Research and Applications, 40: 875-1150.
"... we present an annotated bibliographic overview of the development of fluvial biogeomorphology, whereby the text describes broad trends but is supported by tables of citations that can deliver greater detail ..."

! L. Liu et al. (2025): Ordovician marine Charophyceae and insights into land plant derivations. In PDF, Nature Plants. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41477-025-02003-y.
See here as well.
Note figure 4: Morphological and palaeoecological reconstructions of Tarimochara miraclensis gen. et sp. nov.
Figure 6: Outline of the early Palaeozoic record of streptophyte algae and embryophytes.
"... This discovery demonstrates that at least some species of Charophyceae inhabited shallow normal marine environments at that time. Moreover, these early Charophyceae show that some key morphological innovations associated with an evolutionary transition between streptophyte algae and land plants had occurred before the early Katian ..."

J.S. Ferraz et al. (2025): An oasis in Western Gondwana: A diverse Guadalupian paleoflora from South America. In PDF, Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 158.
See here as well.
Note figure 9: Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Cerro Chato outcrop.

M. Krings (2025): Oldest fossil evidence of cell wall apposition as a plant defense response to fungal invasion, with notes on an analogous mechanism in equally old arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Abstract, in PDF. N. Jb. Geol. Paläont. Abh., 315: 175–185. See here as well.
Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii, a small land plant sporophyte from the Lower Devonian Rhynie chert, show preserved papilla-like cell wall appositions encasing invasive fungal hyphae
[...] some early land plants were evidently able to recognize invasive fungi and respond to their presence by remodeling and reinforcing the cell walls specifically at the sites of attempted invasion ..."

D.G. Miralles et al. (2025): Vegetation–climate feedbacks across scales. Open access, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1544.
Note figure 2: Interaction between vegetation and climate trends and extremes.
"... Our goal is to highlight the state of science and review recent studies that may help advance our collective understanding of vegetation feedbacks and the role they play in climate ..."

! G.E. Mustoe (2025): Mineralization of Fossil Wood with Macrocrystalline Quartz: A Microscopic Investigation. Open access, Minerals, 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/min15030225.
"... there are only a few principal requirements. Dissolved Si concentration need to be at saturation level, and pH, Eh, and temperature parameters must be suitable for silica precipitation. The precipitation rate must be slow enough to allow the development of the well-ordered lattices necessary for the growth of quartz crystals. Macroscopic crystal growth requires sufficient open space for the formation of individual terminated shapes. These spaces can be related to anatomical features (e.g., vessels in angiosperm wood) or structural defects (e.g., fractures or rot pockets). When wood petrifaction has occurred in series of episodes ..."










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Last updated September 03, 2025

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A tag cloud of 100 links:
Early Land Plants International Palaeobotanical and Palaeontological Institutions Bacterial Biofilms (Microbial Mats) Progress in Palaeobotany and Palynology Tutorials, Tips and Tricks to Adobe Photoshop What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists? Teaching Documents about Plant Anatomy Palynology Databases Palynology Palaeosoils Indexes in Palaeontology and Evolution Software for Palaeontology Early Triassic Floras Cellulose Peel Technique Biotic Recovery from the Permian-Triassic Mass Extinction Filicales Fungi The Rise of Oxygen Molecular Palaeobotany Fossil Animal Plant Interaction Teaching Documents about Taphonomy The Mass Extinction at the End of the Permian Pith Cast Preservation High Dynamic Range Imaging (HDR) Sphenophyta Looking for a Job Selected Geology Cuticles Playa Lakes (Endorheic Basins) Palaeobotanical, Botanical and Palaeontological Bibliographies Cyanobacteria and Stromatolites Search The Pros and Cons of Pre-Neogene Growth Rings Digital Image Processing Microscopy Writing, Translating and Drawing Angiosperms Bryophyta Triassic Palaeobotany, Palynology and Stratigraphy Fossil Charcoal Teaching Documents about Palaeobotany The Mass Extinction at the End of the Triassic Upcoming Meetings and Symposia Search for Literature Directories focused on Palaeobotany Virtual Field Trip Guides All about Upper Triassic Gymnosperms Grants and Funding Organisations Helpful Databases and Glossaries Stomatal Density Ginkgoales Teaching Documents Classical Textbooks and Monographs in Palaeobotany Focused on Palaeoclimate Job & Experience Bennettitales Evolution Sciences versus Doctrines of Creationism and Intelligent Design Sedimentology and Sedimentary Rocks Teaching Documents about Cladistics Permineralized Plants and Petrified Forests Plant Anatomy & Taxonomy Databases focused on Palaeobotany and Palaeontology Science History of Palaeobotany and Renowned Palaeobotanists Palaeoclimate Palaeobotany, Botany, and Palaeontology Journals Online Glossaries, Dictionaries and Encyclopedias Preservation & Taphonomy Stratigraphy and Facies of the European Keuper Insight into the Triassic World Plant Fossil Preservation Cycads Coal Petrology Open Access Publishing Focus Stacking (Photography, Extended Depth of Field) Teaching Documents about Classification and Phylogeny Fossil and Recent Plant Taxa Teaching Documents about Stratigraphy and Historical Geology Whole Plant Reconstructions Charcoal & Coal Petrology Pyrite Preservation Palaeobotanists Personal Pages Paleovegetation Reconstructions Palaeobotanical and Palaeontological Collections Taxonomy and Plant Classification Databases Photography and Scanning Software Ecology & Palaeoenvironment Leaf Size and Shape and the Reconstruction of Past Climates Palaeobotanical Tools Websites, showing Plant Fossils Conferences & List Server Pteridospermopsida Institutions & Organisations Abstracts- and Preprint Server Evolution & Extinction Lycophyta Riparian Habitats Teaching Documents about Botany Teaching Documents about Evolution





















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