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. ...,










Home / What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists?


Categories
Palaeobotany and Palaeontology Forums@


What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists?


! H. Kerp et al. (2026): Plants, spores, and pollen. PDF file, p. 189-215; in: Felix M. Gradstein et al. (eds.): Fossils and Earth Time, Evolution and Biostratigraphy. See also here.

L. Grauvogel-Stamm and S.R. Ash (2005): Recovery of the Triassic land flora from the end-Permian life crisis. In PDF, Comptes Rendus Palevol, 4: 593-608. See here as well.
"... Our analysis of the Triassic floras of Europe shows that their recovery began, as in North China, with the proliferation of the lycopsid Pleuromeia during the Early Triassic and that it proceeded with the resurgence of the conifers in the early Middle Triassic (Early Anisian), the return of the cycadophytes and the pteridosperms in the Late Anisian and the progressive evolutionary modernization of the subsequent
[...] The fact that Pleuromeia was the most distinctive feature of the Early Triassic all over Eurasia and in the southern continents suggests that this lycopsid was an opportunistic pioneer plant ..."

X.-H. Huang et al. (2025): Spatial distribution patterns and formation of global spermatophytes. Open access, Journal of Integrative Plant Biology, 67: 2668-2685. https://doi.org/10.1111/jipb.13923. See here as well (in PDF).
"... we constructed a Spermatophyte Spatial Evolutionary System (SSES) that classifies global spermatophytes into 18 distribution types and six distribution supertypes within three primary floristic elements: cosmopolitan, tropical, and temperate
[...] Our results provide novel insights into the spatial evolution of global spermatophytes and highlight that similar distribution patterns of spermatophytes were driven by their comparable formation processes and mechanisms at the levels of floristic element, distribution supertype, and type ..."

L. Zheng et al. (2025): Application of 3D digital technologies in paleontological reconstruction: a systematic literature review. Free access, Cogent Social Sciences, 11. DOI: 10.1080/23311886.2025.2495188.
"... This study presents a systematic literature review on the application of three-dimensional digital technologies in paleontological reconstruction
[...] These articles specifically address the use of three-dimensional digital technologies in paleontological reconstruction and research, and despite promising developments, this review acknowledges the challenges and limitations associated with digital restoration ..."

H. O'Rourke et al. (2026): Taphonomic Completeness: A new metric for assessing fossil leaf preservation using the Spitsbergen Cenozoic fossil flora. Free access, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 344.
"... The leaf traits visible in the Spitsbergen Cenozoic fossil flora were studied to analyse the effect of leaf traits on preservation potential
[...] 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 ..."

Profoto.
A Swedish brand that makes high-end lighting equipment.

! B. Palmer et al. (2025): Microbial taphonomy of Ginkgo leaves in fine-grained substrates: how sediment type facilitates preservation. Open access, Palaeontology, 68.
"... we investigate the microbial community composition of biofilms on floating and buried leaves of living Ginkgo
leaf biofilms forming in fine-grained sediments with low organic content, such as clay, foster anaerobic environments which could lead to incorporating minerals that enhance biomineralization on leaf surfaces ..."

C.K. Boyce (2008): Seeing the forest with the leaves-clues to canopy placement from leaf fossil size and venation characteristics. In PDF, Geobiology, 7: 192-199.
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
See also here.

J. Chen et al. (2025): Regional postdeforestation weathering feedback drove diachronous C–S cycle perturbations during the end-Permian crisis. In PDF, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 122. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2504841122. See likewise here.
Note figure 3: Spatial-temporal correlation of the 13Corg and d34Spy records from the paleotropical Southwest China, the paleo-high-latitude Sydney Basin, and the marine Meishan section (A), and the hypothesized evolution of the deterioration of the terrestrial processes over the three distinct phases of the P-Tr transition in Southwest China (B).
"... Latitudinal Diachroneity in Terrestrial Ecosystem Collapse During the End-Permian Mass Extinction
[...] The temporal relationship between marine and terrestrial extinctions during the end-Permian mass extinction remains a subject of debate, despite hypothesized global synchronous collapse of marine and terrestrial ecosystems ..."

! M. Laaß and R. Rößler (2025): Den Urinsekten auf der Spur: Eiablage und andere Fortpflanzungsstrategien im Fossilbericht – Aussagen über vergangene kontinentale Ökosysteme. PDF file, in German. Veröffentlichungen Museum für Naturkunde Chemnitz, 48: 27–106.
Note figure 3: Life cycles in insects.
!Figure 30: Reconstruction of the egg-laying process of Megaovoidus foveolatus on a Calamites trunk.
"... The aim of this paper is to present the most important reproduction and egg-laying strategies of recent insects and to provide an overview of the current state of knowledge regarding their origin and occurrence in the fossil record. The focus is on the earliest egg deposits from the late Paleozoic ..."

J. Carrión et al. (2026): Beyond the cold steppes: Neanderthal landscapes and the neglect of flora. Free access, Quaternary Science Reviews, 371.
"... this work seeks to challenge the entrenched popular view that Neanderthals must be associated exclusively with treeless, open glacial landscapes, instead highlighting the diversity of vegetated environments in which they lived ..."

! Y. He et al. 2024): Opportunities and Challenges in Applying AI to Evolutionary Morphology Open access, Integrative Organismal Biology, 6. https://doi.org/10.1093/iob/obae036.
"... We introduce the main available AI techniques, categorizing them into 3 stages based on their order of appearance: (1) machine learning, (2) deep learning, and (3) the most recent advancements in large-scale models and multimodal learning. Next, we present case studies of existing approaches using AI for evolutionary morphology ..."

W. Guo et al. (2024): Rapid riparian ecosystem recovery in low-latitudinal North China following the end-Permian mass extinction. In PDF, bioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.11.17.624019. See here as well.
Note figure S6: Root traces from the Heshanggou Formation in studied sections and outcrops.
Figure S9: Reconstruction of the Spathian (Heshanggou Formation) coastal mudplain to alluvial ecosystem in North China.

L.D. Numberger-Thuy et al. (2025): An exceptional window into the Triassic-Jurassic boundary on the margins of the Ardenno-Rhenish Massif: stratigraphy and palaeontology of the Irrel section (Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany). In PDF, Swiss Journal of Palaeontology, 144.
Note figure 8: Palaeogeographical position of the Irrel area (indicated by a star) during the Rhaetian, Late Triassic.

PICRYL (developed by GetArchive):
PICRYL is the largest media source for public domain images, scans, and documents. Go to:
! Paleobotany .

! J. Carrión et al. (2025): Plants in the shadows: Bridging the gap in paleoecology and paleoart. Free access, Earth-Science Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2025.105371.
"... we evaluate methodological frameworks for translating fragmentary data into coherent visual ecosystems
[...] Particular attention is given to recent botanical paleoart
[...] we present original reconstructions from the Iberian Peninsula ..."

Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology.
This is the official journal of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists. Alcheringa covers all aspects of palaeontology and its ramifications into the earth and biological sciences.
See especially: Exceptional fossils and biotas of Gondwana: the fortieth anniversary issue of Alcheringa. By Stephen McLoughlin (2016).
Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology Vol. 40. Also worth checkin out:
! A cumulative index for 50 years of Alcheringa (by Peter A. Jell et al., 2025; DOI: 10.1080/03115518.2025.2588832.

Earth-Science Reviews (Elsevier).
Earth-Science Reviews publishes review articles dealing with all aspects of the Earth Sciences.

S. Maidment and R.J. Butler (2025): New frontiers in dinosaur exploration. Open access, Biol. Lett., 21: 20250045.
"... The potential for new dinosaur discoveries in India and Africa seems particularly high, while the Carnian, when dinosaurs probably originated, and the Middle Jurassic, when the major clades diversified, offer the best opportunities to make discoveries that will fundamentally change our understanding of dinosaur evolution ..."

M.C. Langer et al. (2009): The origin and early evolution of dinosaurs. In PDF, Biological Reviews, 84: 1-56. See here as well.
Note figure 11: Reconstruction of two dinosaur-bearing fossil assemblages of the South American Late Triassic.
"... The oldest unequivocal records of Dinosauria were unearthed from Late Triassic rocks (approximately 230 Ma) accumulated over extensional rift basins in southwestern Pangea
[...] dinosaurs did not gradually replace other terrestrial tetrapods over the Late Triassic. In fact, the radiation of the group comprises at least three landmark moments, separated by controversial (Carnian-Norian, Triassic-Jurassic) extinction events. These are mainly characterized by early diversification in Carnian times
[...] the oldest dinosaurs were geographically restricted to south Pangea, including rare ornithischians and more abundant basal members of the saurischian lineage, the group achieved a nearly global distribution by the latest Triassic ..."

K. El Mahboubi and F. Romani (2025): Non-seed plant research in the spotlight. Free access, Biology Open, 14.
Note figure 1: Model systems and available resources in non-seed plants.
"... researchers embracing the diversity of plants and using emerging and established model systems covering hornworts, mosses, liverworts, lycophytes and ferns
[...] developments reflect a broader shift in plant biology, where diverse model systems are essential for reconstructing the evolutionary history of plants ..."

Botanical Doctor (A.F. Hopkins-Galloway, GB):
Paleobotany: An Overview.

Botanical Doctor (A.F. Hopkins-Galloway, GB):
What is a plant?

C. Cleal (2025): Diversity of small-leafed equisetaleans in Late Carboniferous coal swamps of Euramerica. Free access, Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India. https://doi.org/10.1177/05529360251400.
"... A group of equisetalean shoots with distinctive small leaves occurs widely in the upper Bashkirian and lower Moscovian coal-bearing deposits of Euramerica. They have often been named Asterophyllites grandis and Asterophyllites charaeformis in the past, but the use of these names is illegitimate for these species. In this study, these shoots have been assigned to five fossil species: Asterophyllites delicatulus, Asterophyllites parvulus, Asterophyllites gracilis, Asterophyllites taylorianum, and Asterophyllites lubnensis ..."

L. De Brito (2026): Taphonomic study of Pinaceae ovulate cones from the Lower Cretaceous of Belgium and paleoenvironmental implications. Open access, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 346.

J. Wyman et al. (2025): Comparative rhizotaxy of fossil and living isoetalean rhizomorphs reveals development through rootlet intercalation within a triangular lattice Open Access, Annals of Botany.
"... Isoetales is a clade of lycopsids
[...] Despite the differences in scale of taxa in the clade, the rooting system of all members consists of two parts; rootlets develop from a rhizomorph in a regular pattern termed rhizotaxy
[...] We provide a single geometric definition and predicted developmental mechanism for rhizotaxy that applies to all Isoetales ..."

Links for Paleobotanists:
! Free Downloadable Maps.

! B. van de Schootbrugge et al. (2025): Continental-scale wildfires during end-Triassic greenhouse warming. In PDF. Paper published on a website (Scientific congresses, symposiums and conference proceedings). EGU General Assembly 2025. See here as well.
Note figure 1: Late Triassic paleogeography.
! Figure 3: Latest Triassic palynomorph Dark Zone in NW Europe.
"... the emission of an estimated 100,000 Gt of CO2 during pulsed eruptions in the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province had dire consequences for the biosphere and resulted in the end-Triassic extinction
[...] we investigate this latest Triassic “dark zone”, using the Palynomorph Darkening Index (PDI) obtained from trilete fern spores
[...] The impact of continental-scale wildfires during the height of the end-Triassic mass-extinction suggests intense climate change exerting heat stress on vegetation as a major factor in the collapse of terrestrial ecosystems ..."

P. Srikampa and S. Suteethorn (2025): Petrified wood of the genus Agathoxylon on the nature trail at Phu Por fossil site, Kham Muang District, Kalasin Province, Thailand. In PDF, Journal of Science and Technology Mahasarakham University, 44. See here as well.

! W.A. DiMichele et al. (2025): Climate, not transport from “uplands” or “extrabasinal lowlands,” is the cause of drought-tolerant terrestrial organisms in the late Paleozoic fossil record. Abstract, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 676.
"... A long-standing interpretation of the Pennsylvanian “Coal Age” tropical landscape partitions it along an elevational gradient, with wetland, drought-intolerant plants and animals occupying lowland, basinal settings, and increasingly drought-tolerant plants and animals colonizing progressively more remote areas, termed “extrabasinal lowlands” and “uplands”
[...] Xeromorphic plants, terrestrialized animals in basinal lowlands reflect climate change not transport from extrabasinal areas
[...] we reexamine here the basis for rejecting the “upland” trope as an explanation for unusual, rarely encountered Late Paleozoic plant and animal fossils or for patterns in their time-space distribution ..."










Top of page
Search in all "Links for Palaeobotanists" Pages!
index sitemap advanced
site search by freefind

This index is compiled and maintained by Klaus-Peter Kelber,
Würzburg,
e-mail
kp-kelber@t-online.de
Last updated January 09, 2026

Golden Trilobite 2011 Some backward links and recommendations
received to date for "Links for Palaeobotanists"




The Golden Trilobite Award Winners List






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





















eXTReMe Tracker