
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).
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!
G.E. Mustoe (2026):
Microscopy
of Macrofossils: Techniques from Geology. Free access,
Fossil Studies, 4.
"... This paper emphasizes inexpensive methods for researchers who
want to expand their microscopy horizons without needing deep funding or access to
specialized facilities ..."
R. Chu et al. (2025):
Orbital
eccentricity and internal feedbacks drove the Triassic megamonsoon variability. Free access,
Scientific Reports.
See likewise here
(in PDF).
Note figure 1: Simulated global monsoon regions and geological records
with well-preserved orbital-scale megamonsoonal dynamics.
"... Our temporally calibrated, orbitally resolved reconstruction of the lake
hydroclimate variations in the Ordos
Basin, spanning from ~ 246 to 239 Ma, in tandem with our climate simulations,
provides key insights into the
behavior of the monsoon hydrologic cycle in the Tethys region during the Middle Triassic ..."
Fossil Studies .
Fossil Studies - formerly Fossils - is an international, peer-reviewed,
open access journal on all aspects of palaeontology published quarterly online by MDPI
("Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute",
a major Switzerland-based publisher).
Stephen C. Hart, School of Forestry, NAU:
Ecosystem Ecology:
Case studies on the Colorado Plateau.
Powerpoint presentation.
P.X. Wang et al. (2017):
The
global monsoon across time scales: Mechanisms and outstanding issues
Earth-Science Reviews, 174: 84-121. See likewise
here.
"... The present paper addresses driving mechanisms of global monsoon (GM) variability and outstanding issues in
GM science
[...] The primary driver of the GM is solar insolation, and the specific
features in the underlying surface, such as land-sea distribution, topography, and oceanic
circulations, are mainly responsible for the differences among regional monsoon systems ..."
!
B. Hönisch et al. (2023):
Toward
a Cenozoic history of
atmospheric CO2.
The Cenozoic CO2 Proxy Integration Project (CenCO2PIP) Consortium.
In PDF,
Science, 382: eadi5177. See here
and there
as well.
!
Note figure 1: Documentation and assessment of all Cenozoic paleo-CO2
estimates published to date.
"... The Cenozoic Carbon dioxide Proxy Integration Project (CenCO2PIP) Consortium assessed a
comprehensive collection of proxy determinations to define the atmospheric carbon dioxide
record for the past 66 million years. This synthesis provides the most complete record yet
available ..."
Talline Martins and Heidi Hillhouse,
Systematics Seminar,
Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin:
Major Evolutionary Transitions,
Transitional
Fossils (Powerpoint presentatation). Including the evolution of vascular plants,
Cooksonia as an example.
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
!
J. Stenlund et al. (2026):
Visualisation
of deep evolutionary time: looking back and looking forward. Open access,
Journal of Biological Education, 60. See here
as well (in PDF).
Note figure 1: A visualisation of influential and pioneering contributions and corresponding
visual communication of DET [Deep Evolutionary Time] relative to scientific discovery
over time from recent (left) towards older (right) events.
Zentrales Geo-Archiv,
Bayerisches Landesamt für Umwelt:
Cyclotosaurus
ebrachensis. In German.
The central geo-archive of the Bavarian State Office for the Environment (LfU)
holds an extraordinary treasure from Earth's history: Cyclotosaurus ebrachensis,
an amphibian from the germanotype Keuper (Coburger Sandstein, Carnian, Triassic) of
the Steigerwald, Frankonia.
A. Carta et al. (2024):
The
seed morphospace, a new contribution towards the multidimensional study of
angiosperm sexual reproductive biology. In PDF,
Annals of Botany, 134: 701–710. https://doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcae099.
See likewise
here.
Note figure 1: Morphological diversity of seeds and fruits.
Table 1: Key morphological traits used to construct the seed morphospace, their functional role and
relevant data sources/references.
"... we present a roadmap to synthesize the diversity of seed forms in extant angiosperms, relying on
the morphospace concept
[...] we outline challenges and future research directions, combining the morphospace with macroevolutionary comparative methods
to underline the drivers that gave rise to the diversity of observed seed forms ..."
N. Boonchai et al. (2009):
Paleontological
parks and museums
and prominent fossil sites in Thailand
and their importance in the conservation of fossils. In PDF,
Carnets de Géologie.
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
!
Note figure 3 and 4: Petrified trunks with root plates.
O.T. Akinsanpe et al. (2025):
Biomarkers
in terrestrial organic matter from the Lower Devonian to
Oligocene: Evidence from selected regions of the laurasian supercontinent. Open access,
Evolving Earth, 3.
"... Biomarkers and biomarker-based parameters have been employed in this paper as a geochemical
tracer to understand the Laurasian Supercontinent geological and paleoenvironmental processes,
and to reconstruct paleobotanic (paleovegetation) evolution via their structural configurations
(carbon skeletons), which evolve over geological time and alter by burial diagenesis and
thermal stress ..."
! J.A. Trotter et al. (2015):
Long-term
cycles of Triassic climate change: a new d18O record from conodont apatite. In PDF,
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 415: 165–174. See
also here.
! Please note figure 3: Schematic showing best-estimate
d18OphosN composite curve for surface waters of the Tethyan subtropics,
together with major geo- and bio-events through the Triassic.
"... This record shows several major, first order, negative shifts
reflecting intense warming episodes, not only the well-known extreme PTB–Early Triassic
event (~5?), but also two large cycles of similar magnitude (~1.5, ~1.7?) and duration (~7 Myrs)
during the late Carnian and late Norian. Between the PTB–Early Triassic and Carnian major episodes,
three rapid shorterterm warming events of decreasing magnitude punctuate the mid–late
Anisian, early Ladinian, and latest
Ladinian, with distinct cooler (i.e. favourable) intervals characterising the early
Anisian and early Carnian, indicating a fluctuating but ameliorating Middle Triassic climate trend. Two long
periods of sustained
cooler conditions occurred during the Late Triassic, for much of the Norian and Rhaetian.
!
R.M. Bateman et al. (2026):
Early
evolutionary history of the seed. Open access,
Biological Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1002/brv.70134. See here
as well (PDF file).
"... We reappraise knowledge of the evolutionary history of the gymnospermous seed,
from its origin in the late Devonian
[...] The framework for our broader discussions is a novel cladistic analysis of anatomically
preserved Palaeozoic seeds, analysing 79 seed-species for 89 morphological characters ..."
M. Brea et al. (2015):
Reconstruction
of a fossil forest reveals details of the palaeoecology, palaeoenvironments and climatic
conditions in the late Oligocene of South America. In PDF,
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 418: 19-42.
See here
as well.
Note figure 2: Stumps and trunks of the Aluminé Fossil Forest from the Rancahué Formation in the Aluminé
region (Patagonia).
!
H.K. Garza et al. (2024):
Detrital U-Pb ages for
the first well-preserved vascular plant
Cooksonia from the UK and Irish macrofossil record. Open access,
Geological Magazine, 161: 1–15.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756824000384
Please note figure 9: Paleogeographic reconstruction during Early to Late Silurian.
"... the timing of Cooksonia’s
terrestrial emergence remains elusive as phylogenetic models, microfossils and macrofossils
provide different timings for land colonization by vascular plants
[...] Cwm Graig Ddu (Wales)
yields a (Pridoli-Ludlow) maximum age of 423 ± 3 Ma. The findings provide the first detrital
zircon U-Pb dates for the oldest Cooksonia macrofossils globally ...
M.W. Hounslow et al. (2025):
Omission and
pacing of events at the Norian–Rhaetian and
Triassic–Jurassic transitions in Britain. open access,
Geological Magazine, 162: 1–27. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756825100162.
"... Magnetostratigraphy, palynology and ammonite biochronology of the Staithes
S-20 core are used in
an integrated evaluation of the late Norian to early Hettangian successions in Britain.
[...] An eco-plant model assessment of
the miospores indicates greater proportions of eurythermic and europhyte floras, suggesting
stronger seasonality in palaeoclimate was probably a key factor in the end-Triassic extinction ..."
Christopher Crawford, Fort Wayne, Indiana:
Digital
Photo Editing and Printing Tutorials. Note especially:
An
Introduction To Film Scanning.
!
M.P. D'antonio and C.K. Boyce (2025):
Structural
and physiological constraints on arborescent lycopsid establishment and growth: Free access,
New Phytologist, 249: 1605-1617.
Note figure 7: Arboreous lycopsid trunk base with overlapping stigmarian axes.
"... a fossil specimen preserving both proximal and distal vascular
anatomy of a single lycopsid tree was studied to compare proximal
and distal trunk hydraulic conductivity
[...] we demonstrate that existing ontogenetic
models could not have applied to arborescent lycopsid ontogeny.
We propose a new model that, despite its unusual nature, agrees
with all available evidence ..."
J. Ziaja and A. Fijalkowska-Mader (2022): Polish Palaeobotany: 750 Million Years of Plant History as Revealed in a Century of Studies. Mesozoic Terrestrial Palynology and Flora Reconstruction. In PDF, Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae, 91.
E. Barrón et al. (2025): Evolution of palynofloras across the Triassic/Jurassic boundary in the central sector of the Iberian Range, Spain. Free access, Journal of Iberian Geology https://doi.org/10.1007/s41513-025-00313-w. See here as well.
A. Capobianco (2025):
How
many characters are needed to reconstruct a phylogeny?. In PDF,
Biology Letters, See likewise
here.
"... I designed a simulation study in the software RevBayes to explore how the number of sampled
discrete characters affects accuracy and precision of Bayesian phylogenetic estimates
[...] Results indicate that between 100 and 500 variable characters are
necessary to reach sufficient accuracy and precision of phylogenetic estimates
for as low as 20 tips ..."
M. Saccò et al. (2021):
Salt
to conserve: a review on the ecology and preservation of hypersaline ecosystems. In PDF,
Biological Reviews, 96: 2828-2850. See likewise
here.
Note figure 1: Worldwide distribution of salt lake areas.
!
Figure 2: Main ecological routes in hypersaline systems.
"... In fact, despite occupying almost half of the volume of inland waters and providing
crucial services to humanity and nature, inland saline ecosystems are often overlooked ..."
Tim Horner, Geology Department,
California State University, Sacramento:
!
Sedimentology
and Stratigraphy. Course information, lecture notes, doc-files and Powerpoint presentations.
Note for example:
Lecture 10:
Evaporite deposition, phosphatic rocks, glauconite.
Powerpoint presentation.
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
C. Pott and H. Takimoto (2025):
Ohaniella gen. nov., a
new whole-plant bennettite from the Oxfordian (Upper Jurassic) Tochikubo Formation of
Shidazawa, Fukushima, northeast Japan. Free access,
Paleontological Research, 316–331. https://doi.org/10.2517/prpsj.250010.
"... slabs collected from the Oxfordian Tochikubo
Formation in northeast Japan with bennettitalean articulate fossils
(branched axes with attached leaves and ovuliferous flowers) preserved
were examined
[...] Based on the fossils at hand, a
whole-plant bennettitalean was restored ..."
R. Sallenave and A. Ganguli (2021): PLAYA LAKES: Understanding Their Importance and How to Protect Them and Improve Their Function. In PDF.
C.T. Gee et al. (2025):
The
whole plant of Araucaria delevoryasii and Agathoxylon hoodii—giant trees with silicified
wood, gently tapering trunks, araucarian seed and pollen cones, and Brachyphyllum-type
leaves with cuticle from the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation of the Howe-Stephens
Quarry, Wyoming, USA. In PDF,
Geology of the Intermountain West, 12: 293–314. https://doi.org/10.31711/giw.v12.pp293-314.
Note here
as well.
"... We describe here a new whole plant of Agathoxylon hoodii (Tidwell et Medlyn)
Gee, Sprinkel, Bennis et Gray
and Araucaria delevoryasii Gee from the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation
[...] The whole plant should be referred to as the Araucaria delevoryasii
tree ..."
!
T. McKie and B. Kilhams (2025):
Triassic. PDF file,
In: Ten Veen, J.H., Vis, G.-J.,
De Jager, J. & Wong, Th.E. (eds):
Geology of the Netherlands,
second edition. Amsterdam University Press (Amsterdam):
155-183. DOI: 10.5117/9789463728362_ch05.
!
You can download the entire book as a PDF file free of charge!
Penn State University:
Oxygen
isotopes and climate/Kepler’s laws.
Powerpoint presentation.
"Introduction To Global Change",
see likewise
here
and there.
D.P. Mishra and S. Murthy (2025): Macroscopic charcoal remains as evidence of wildfire from the early Permian of Bandar Coalfield, Wardha Basin, India. In PDF, Geophytology, 55: 87–94.
T. Theurer et al. (2025):
Disentangling
the multi-phase alteration of fossil charcoals: A cautionary tale from the Isle of Mull,
Scotland. Free access, Global and Planetary Change, 254.
"... Our Raman spectroscopic investigation of palaeocharcoal from the Isle of Mull (Scotland),
entrained within a lahar deposit
that has undergone intrusion, reveals geothermometric discrepancies and
spectral features consistent with
microstructural modification ..."
D. Peyrot et al. (2025): Palynology from the Foura Sandstone type section, Timor-Leste, and late Ladinian–Carnian (Middle–Upper Triassic) vegetation reconstruction from NW Australia. Abstract, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 338.
H. O'Rourke et al. (2025):
Taphonomic
Completeness: A new metric for assessing fossil leaf preservation using the Spitsbergen
Cenozoic fossil flora. Free access,
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 344.
"... this study highlights the differing preservation quality of leaves in the fossil record based on life
form through the application of a new ‘Taphonomic Completeness’ metric ..."
!
P.R. Crane (2026):
Birbal
Sahni Introduces the Pentoxyleae. Free access,
International Journal of Plant Sciences, 186.
"... Continuing to
regard the Pentoxylon plant as “an extinct gymnosperm of unknown affinity” [...] is clearly
unsatisfactory, but more targeted research is needed to come to a more helpful
conclusion. Crucial will be careful investigations of better preserved fossil material and
especially a more detailed understanding of the homologies of seed structure, not only
in Carnoconites but also in Bennettitales as well as other plants, such as Lindtheca
and Nataligma ..."
C.C. Loron et al. (2026):
Prototaxites
fossils are structurally and chemically distinct from extinct and extant Fungi. Free access,
Science Advances, 12.
Note figure 1M: Artist reconstruction of P. taiti within the Rhynie
ecosystem including hypothesized reconstruction of the aerial portion.
Figure 4: The morphology, metabolism, ecology, and chemistry of Prototaxites preclude its placement
in known crown lineages of multicellular eukaryotes.
"... Prototaxites was the first giant organism to live on the terrestrial surface
[...] We report that fossils of Prototaxites taiti from the 407-million-year-old
Rhynie chert were chemically distinct from contemporaneous Fungi and structurally distinct from
all known Fungi. This finding casts
doubt upon the fungal affinity of Prototaxites, instead suggesting that this enigmatic
organism is best assigned to an entirely extinct eukaryotic lineage ..."
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This index is compiled and maintained by
Klaus-Peter Kelber, Würzburg, e-mail kp-kelber@t-online.de Last updated February 13, 2026 |
Some backward links and recommendations received to date for "Links for Palaeobotanists" The Golden Trilobite Award Winners List
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