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 & Conservation, Drawing, Writing,
Microscopy, TEM, Photography, 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 ...
Software
Palaeontological Software, Software of all topics ...
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
S.-Engines, Botany Search etc. Plagiarism S.
Palaeobotanical Directories, Palaeont. D., Bot. D. ...,










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What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists?


! M. Yaqoob et al. (2025): Advancing paleontology: a survey on deep learning methodologies in fossil image analysis. In PDF, Artificial Intelligence Review, 58. See also here.
Note Figure 9: Chronological overview of DL applications in fossil image analysis from 2017 to 2024.
"... key fossil image processing and analysis tasks, such as segmentation and classification, still require significant user intervention, which can be labor-intensive and subject to human bias. Recent advances in deep learning offer the potential to automate fossil image analysis, improving throughput and limiting operator bias
[...] we discuss novel techniques for fossil data augmentation and fossil image enhancements, which can be combined with advanced neural network architectures ..."

I.I. Kuipers et al. (2024): A new species of Neocalamites from the Upper Buntsandstein (Anisian) of Üdingen (Rur Eifel, Germany). Open access, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 329.

E. Capel et al. (2024): New morphological and anatomical data derived from a rare Early Devonian French flora. In PDF, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 322: 105049.
Also available from here.

S. Ramírez-Barahona (2024): Incorporating fossils into the joint inference of phylogeny and biogeography of the tree fern order Cyatheales. Free access, Evolution, 78: 919–933.
"...By combining paleontological and neontological distribution data for Cyatheales, I inferred a more complex biogeographical history than previously depicted based on the distribution of extant species alone
[...] I use data for 101 fossil and 442 extant tree ferns to reconstruct the biogeographic history of the group over the last 220 million years
[...] The fossil record is not without temporal, geographic, and phylogenetic bias, yet fossils alone hold information about past distributions ..."

B. Adroit et al. (2025): Changes in plant–herbivore interactions across time scales: bridging paleoecology and contemporary ecology. In PDF, Front. Ecol. Evol., 12: 1539173. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2024.1539173.

J.L. García Massini et al. 2025: Jurassic Osmundaceous Landscapes in Patagonia: Exploring the Concept of Ecological Stasis in the Deseado Massif, Argentina. Open access, Plants, 14, 165; https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14020165.
"... we report the presence of a plant paleocommunity, dominated by ferns of the family Osmundaceae
[...] These compositional, paleoenvironmental, and trophic characteristics of the Jurassic Osmundaceae suggest a possible case of ecological stasis, where Osmundaceae-dominated plant communities apparently persisted in swamps of comparable structures, functions ..."

! J. Jehlicka et al. (2024): Microbial colonization of gypsum: from the fossil record to the present day. Open access, Frontiers in Microbiology, 15.
"... Gypsum colonized by microorganisms, including cyanobacteria, eukaryotic algae, and diverse heterotrophic communities, occurs in hot, arid or even hyperarid environments, in cold environments of the Antarctic and Arctic zones, and in saline and hypersaline lakes and ponds where gypsum precipitates
[...] We here review the worldwide occurrences of microbially colonized gypsum and the specific properties of gypsum related to its function as a substrate and habitat ..."

S. Patra et al: (2024): Harnessing AI for Geosciences Education: A Deep Dive into ChatGPT's Impact. In PDF, Geosci. Commun. Discuss. https://doi.org/10.5194/gc-2023-7, 2024.
See here as well.

! M. Steinthorsdottir et al. (2025): Phanerozoic atmospheric CO2 reconstructed with proxies and models: Current understanding and future directions. In PDF, Treatise on Geochemistry (Third Edition), 5: 467-492.
Note figure 3: Phanerozoic compilation of paleo-atmospheric CO2 estimates with initial vetting of data.
Figure 4: The Atmosphere-Ocean-Sediment carbon cycle.
"... This review addresses the terrestrial and marine proxies used to estimate paleo-CO2 concentrations and how the biological and/or geochemical properties of each proxy encodes the ambient CO2 signal
[...] The review concludes by addressing next steps in advancing the science of CO2 reconstruction and for improving our understanding of the evolution of atmospheric CO2 over the past half-billion years ..."

! N.K. Dhami et al. (2023): Microbially mediated fossil concretions and their characterization by the latest methodologies: a review. Free access, Front. Microbiol. 14: 1225411. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1225411.
Note figure 1: The three broad modes of fossilization.
Figure 5: Schematic of photic zone euxinia conditions, calcium carbonate concretion formation and in-situ fossilization, demonstrating the complex eogenetic (water column) and diagenetic (sediment/water interface) processes which can be interpreted from molecular biomarkers.
Figure 6: Visual representation of the factors involved in formation of iron carbonate concretions in freshwater influenced environments.
! Figure 7: Flow diagram for analytical methods applicable to microbial fossil concretions, modern and ancient.
! Table 2: Brief summary of the various analytical techniques applicable to concretion analysis, as discussed in this review.
"... we provide a comprehensive account of organic geochemical, and complimentary inorganic geochemical, morphological, microbial and paleontological, analytical methods, including recent advancements, relevant to the characterization of concretions and sequestered OM [organic matter] ..."

D.R. Greenwood et al. (2022): Palm fronds from western Canada are the northernmost palms from the Late Cretaceous of North America and may include the oldest Arecaceae. Free access, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 301.
"... The presence of fossil palms in the Campanian to Maastrichtian of Alberta and Saskatchewan constrains climate reconstructions for the Late Cretaceous high mid-latitudes of North America (c. 55° N) to exclude significant freezing episodes ..."

! A. Carli et al. (2025): Heat stress reduces stomatal numbers in Ginkgo biloba: Implications for the stomatal method of palaeo-atmospheric [CO2] reconstruction during episodes of global warming. Open access, Science of The Total Environment, 958.

R.R. Schoch et al. (2024): Growing giants: ontogeny and life history of the temnospondyl Mastodonsaurus giganteus (Stereospondyli) from the Middle Triassic of Germany. In PDF, Fossil Record, 27: 401–422. DOI 10.3897/fr.27.125379.

A.J. Hetherington (2024): The role of fossils for reconstructing the evolution of plant development. Free access, The Company of Biologists, 151.
Note figure 1: Fossils indicate that roots and leaves evolved independently in vascular plants.
"... The focus of this Spotlight is to showcase the rich plant fossil record open for developmental interpretation and to cement the role that fossils play at a time when increases in genome sequencing and new model species make tackling major questions in the area of plant evolution and development tractable for the first time ..."

Carbon Brief (a UK-based website covering the latest developments in climate science):
! Mapped: How ‘proxy’ data reveals the climate of the Earth’s distant past (by Robert McSweeney, Zeke Hausfather and Tom Prater).

B. Palmer et al. (2024): Decay experiments and microbial community analysis of water lily leaf biofilms: Sediment effects on leaf preservation potential. Open access, PloS one, 19. e0315656. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315656
"... a series of decay experiments was carried out for three months on Nymphaea water lily leaves in aquariums
[...] Our study bridges the information gap between biofilms observed on modern leaves and the mineral encrustation on fossil leaves by analyzing the microbial response in biofilms to substrate types ..."

E.M. Bordy et al. (2024): Selected Karoo geoheritage sites of palaeontological significance in South Africa and Lesotho. Open access, Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 543: 431-446. See likewise here.
Note figure 3c: Palaeo-art mural of a late Permian scene (artwork by Gerhard Marx).
Figure 9f: Reconstruction of the Early Jurassic dinosaur-dominated ecosystem of southern Gondwana.

Museum of Comparative Zoology (MCZ), Harvard Univerity: Introduction to the Sedimentary Processes and Structures of the Trenton Group:
Sedimentary Processes.
Provided by the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.

W. Huang et al. (2024): The First Macrofossil Record of Parasitic Plant Flowers from an Eocene Baltic Amber. Open access, Helyon, 10.
"... we report a fossil corolla and stamens of a probable schoepfiaceous flower (Schoepfiaceae, Santalales) from late Eocene (37.8–33.9 Ma ago) of Kaliningrad, Russia ..."

A.A. Santos et al. (2024): Plant-insect interactions in the mid-Cretaceous paleotropical El Chango Lagerstätte (Cintalapa Fm., Mexico)—patterns of herbivory during the Angiosperm Terrestrial Revolution. Open access, Front. Ecol. Evol., 12. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2024.1381539.

Linda Sohl, Columbia University and NASA/Goddard Institute for Space Studies:
Teaching Paleoclimate and Future Climate to Undergraduates Through EdGCM.
Lecture notes, Powerpoint presentation.

Michael E. Mann, Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia: Insights into Climate Dynamics from Paleoclimate Data. Powerpoint presentation.
Still available via Internet Archive Wayback Machine.

M.J. Benton (2023): Palaeobiology: Rapid succession during mass extinction. Open access, Current Biology, 33.
Note figure 1: The latest Permian Vyatkian fauna from Russia ((artwork: John Sibbick).
Figure 2: Diversity dynamics of tetrapods through the latest Permian and earliest Triassic of the Karoo basin, South Africa.

M. Qvarnström et al. (2024): Digestive contents and food webs record the advent of dinosaur supremacy. Open access, Nature, 636: 397-403.
See here as well.

Geologica Acta .
Geologica Acta is a non-profit general Earth Science Journal providing an innovative and high-quality means of scientific dissemination.

! S. Karacic et al. (2024): Oxygen-dependent biofilm dynamics in leaf decay: an in vitro analysis. Open access, Scientific Reports, 14.
See also here.
"... we used 16S rRNA and ITS gene amplicon sequencing to investigate the composition, temporal dynamics, and community assembly processes of bacterial and fungal biofilms on decaying leaves in vitro
[...] community composition differed significantly between biofilm samples under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, though not among plant species
[...] Oxygen availability and incubation time were found to be primary factors influencing the microbial diversity of biofilms on different decaying plant species in vitro ..."

S. Wedmann et al. (2018): The Konservat-Lagerstätte Menat (Paleocene; France)–an overview and new insights. In PDF, Geologica Acta, 16: 189-213.

S. McLoughlin et al. (2024): Revision and biostratigraphic implications of Thore Halle’s Permian plant fossils from the Falkland (Malvinas) Islands. Open access, Palaeontologia africana, 58: 53–93.
See here and there as well.

Y. Wang et al. (2024): Enhanced global terrestrial moisture from the Early Triassic to the Late Triassic: Evidence from extensive Neocalamites forests in North China. Abstract, Geological Society of America Bulletin. https://doi.org/10.1130/B37522.1

C.C. Labandeira and R. Cenci (2024): Workshop: Insect-Plant Interaction Notes. In PDF, Conference: Ichnia 2024 - The 5th International Congress on Ichnology, Florianópolis, Brazil.
! Note figure 1: The functional feeding group–damage type (FFG-DT) system for documenting and analyzing herbivory in the fossil record.

! E.J. Judd et al. (2024): A 485-million-year history of Earth's surface temperature. In PDF, Science, 385.
See here as well.
"... PhanDA [a state-of-the-art reconstruction of GMST spanning the last 485 million years of Earth history] provides a statistically robust estimate of GMST [global mean surface temperature] through the Phanerozoic.
[...] We find that Earth’s temperature has varied more dynamically than previously thought and that greenhouse climates were very warm. CO2 is the dominant driver of Phanerozoic climate, emphasizing the importance of this greenhouse gas in shaping Earth history
[...] PhanDA exhibits a large range of GMST, spanning 11° to 36°C. ..."

Z.J. Quirk et al. (2024): Where did they come from, where did they go? Niche conservatism in woody and herbaceous plants and implications for plant-based paleoclimatic reconstructions. Open access, Am. J. Bot., 111.
See likewise here.
"... We tested climatic niche conservatism across time by characterizing the climatic niches of living herbaceous ginger plants (Zingiberaceae) and woody dawn redwood (Metasequoia) against paleoniches reconstructed based on fossil distribution data ..."

M Gaetani et al. (2000): Atlas Peri-Tethys, paleogeographical maps. In PDF.

E.J. Edwards et al. (2024): University herbaria are uniquely important. In PDF, Trends in Plant Science, 29.
See here as well.
"... University herbaria play critical roles in biodiversity research and training
[...] Universities have a responsibility to steward these important collections in perpetuity, in alignment with their academic missions and for the good of science and society ..."

J. Bodnar et al. (2024): Plant diversity turnovers in the Triassic-Jurassic transition: evidence from the paleobotanical record of Argentina. In PDF, Revista de la Asociación Geológica Argentina, 81.
See also here and there.

J. Lies and R. Rößler (2024): Der Hornstein von Priefel - Ein Fossilvorkommen aus dem Perm bei Altenburg. PDF file, in German. Veröffentlichungen Museum für Naturkunde Chemnitz, 47: 15-58.
Note figure 4: Historic reconstruction of the Carboniferous vegetation (by Joseph Kuwassegs, 1850).

L.M. Sender et al. (2024): Morphological Diversity of Desmiophyllum Lesquereux Fossil Leaves and Related Palaeoenvironmental Implications from the Early Cretaceous of Northeastern Spain. Open access, Diversity, 16. https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/16/12/730.











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Last updated January 20, 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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