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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E.P. Coturel (2025): The Carboniferous Gondwanan lycophyte Bumbudendron, revisited. In PDF, Geobios, 88–89: 61-69. See likewise here.
Ian West, Southampton Oceanography Centre,
School of Ocean and Earth Science,
Southampton University:
The
Fossil Forest, west of Lulworth Cove, Dorset, southern England.
This is a classic geological locality with the remains and moulds of late Jurassic or early Cretaceous coniferous
trees rooted in a palaeosol, the Great Dirt Bed. Above the trees is stromatolitic limestone and over this the
unusual Broken Beds, a limestone breccia that was originally evaporitic.
E.J. Spagnuolo et al. (2024):
Reconstructing
the Botanical Past: Art and Paleobotany. Free access,
Plant Science Bulletin, 70. See also
here.
Note figure 1: Representative examples of plant paleoart throughout history and modern
plant-centered paleoart.
!
J.B. Antcliffe and M.D. Brasier (2011):
Fossils
with little relief: using lasers to conserve, image, and analyze the Ediacara biota. In PDF,
In: M. Laflamme et al. (eds.), Quantifying the Evolution of Early Life, Topics in Geobiology 36, 223
DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-0680-4_9. See likewise
here.
"... Taking laser scans
of fossils is completely non-invasive, even unlike casting, the chemicals involved in
which can damage delicate fossil surfaces. It is now being seen as a major new tool
to aid in the preservation of critical fossil data ..."
S. Bober and T. Riehl (2024):
Adding
depth to line artwork by digital stippling—a step-by-step guide to the method. In PDF,
Organisms Diversity & Evolution, 14. See also
here.
"... Shading techniques, such as stippling—the application of dots to generate
shade—are the methods of choice for simulating shade, structure, shape, and texture.
In this paper, a step-by-step guide for
digital stippling is presented ..."
R. Maciejewski et al. (2007): Aesthetics of Hand-Drawn vs. Computer-Generated Stipplin. PDF file, in: D.W. Cunningham, G. Meyer, L. Neumann (Eds.): Computational Aesthetics in Graphics, Visualization, and Imaging.
D. Martín et al. (2017): A survey of digital stippling. In PDF, Computers & Graphics, 67: 24-44. See likewise here.
!
D. Kim et al. (2008):
Feature-Guided
Image Stippling. Computer Graphics Forum, 27:
1209–1216. See likewise
here.
"... This paper presents an automatic method for producing stipple renderings from photographs
[...] For effective depiction of image features, we introduce a novel dot placement algorithm which
adapts stipple dots to the local shapes ..."
X. Zhao et al.(2025):
Climate–carbon-cycle
interactions and spatial heterogeneity of the late Triassic Carnian pluvial episode.
Free access, Nature communications, 16.
See likewise
here.
Note figure 4: Simulated climate states before and during the Carnian Pluvial
Episode (CPE).
"... We find that the rapid CPE [Carnian Pluvial Episode] onset
(~15.8 kyr) could have been the result of volcanism and subsequent surface
carbon-cycle feedbacks
[...] The CPE hydrological cycle was typified by
increased aridification in continental interiors and multiple precipitation
centres at low-latitude eastern regions of Pangea and at the poles ..."
Gujarat
Technological University Library,
Chandkheda, Ahmedabad, India:
Environments
and Life. Powerpoint presentation.
Links are available through the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.
J. Fischer et al. (2012):
Palaeoenvironments
of the late Triassic Rhaetian Sea: Implications from oxygen and
strontium isotopes of hybodont shark teeth. In PDF,
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 353–355: 60–72. See also
here.
Note figure 1: Palaeogeographic and structural overviewmap of the late Triassic Central European Basin.
Figure 7. Schematic palaeogeographic map of the Central European Basin illustrating successive
freshening of the Rhaetian Sea from the gates to its eastern margins.
Michon Scott:
Strange Science.
The rocky road to modern Paleontology
and Biology.
This website is an eclectic
collection of old illustrations and information
about the history of palaeontology or biology. Superby done! See especially:
!
Biographies of Palaeontologists.
!
Timeline History of Palaeontology.
Note the progress made in recent decades!
Also worth checking out:
Goof Gallery.
Curious missteps in biology and paleontology are featured here.
!
T.X. Wang et al. (2025):
Fossils
of an endangered, endemic, giant dipterocarp species open a historical
portal into Borneo's vanishing rainforests. Open access,
American Journal of Botany,
"... We compared the leaf cuticles and architecture of these fossil leaves with the
seven living Dryobalanops species
[...] The cuticular features shared between the fossils and extant Dryobalanops,
including the presence of giant stomata on veins, confirm their generic placement ..."
A. Gürdal (2024): Designing Visual Abstracts Used in Scientific Publications. Free access, Türk Akademik Yayinlar Dergisi (TAY Journal), 8: 562-586.
G.Y. Annum (2024): Landscape Painting In Digital Technology: Rudimentary Procedural Lessons in Adobe Photoshop. Free access, Art and Design Review, 8: 562-586.
!
C.F. Kunz et al. (2025):
Functional
genomic perspectives on plant terrestrialization. Free access,
Trends in Genetics.
Note fig. 1: Genomic exploration of streptophyte algal diversity.
"... Recent phylogenomic work has revealed that the streptophyte algae are genetically diverse,
often with splits more ancient than the clade of land plants
[...] Network analyses have pinpointed biological programs shared across 600 million years of
streptophyte evolution
[...] Genomic exploration of streptophyte diversity is in full swing. The sequencing of genome
data from key species across streptophyte algal lineages has set the stage for tapping into the
diverse functions they encode ..."
E.G. Ottone (2025):
On
the trail of jesuits, explorers, and scientists: a history of paleobotany
in Argentina. Free access,
Publicación Electrónica de la Asociación Paleontológica Argentina 25: 49–62.
See here
as well.
Doug Soltis, Amber Tilley and Hongshan Wang,
Florida Museum of Natural History (FLMNH), University of Florida:
Deep Time.
A comprehensive phylogenetic tree of living and fossil angiosperms. Go to:
Virtual
Fossil Collection.
Reconstruction of Archaefructus sinensis, Androdecidua endressii.
These expired links are now available through the Internet Archive´s
Wayback Machine.
M.W. Davidson and M. Abramowitz (2002): Optical microscopy. In PDF.
King Saud University (KSU), Riyadh, Saudi Arabia:
Optical
Microscopy.
Powerpoint presentation.
Websites outdated. Links lead to versions archived by the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.
!
M.S. Ignatov et al. (2024):
How
to Recognize Mosses from Extant Groups among Paleozoic and Mesozoic Fossils. Open access,
Diversity, 16.
"... The present study provides
new data on Paleozoic mosses of the order Protosphagnales
[...] A list of Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Eocene moss fossils
suitable for age calibration in phylogenetic trees is provided ..."
Germán Mora and William Gutowski,
Iowa State University of Science and Technology:
Quaternary Paleoclimatology. Go to:
Non-marine
paleoclimate records: Pollen Data.
Lecture notes, Powerpoint presentation.
M.R. Stoneman et al. (2024):
Two-photon
excitation fluorescence microspectroscopy protocols for examining
fluorophores in fossil plants. Open access, Commun. Biol., 7.
See likewise
here.
"... In this work, we utilize two-photon fluorescence microspectroscopy to spatially and
spectrally resolve the fluorescence emitted by amber-embedded plants, leaf compressions,
and silicified wood. The advanced micro-spectroscope utilized, with its pixel-level spectral
resolution and line-scan excitation capabilities, allows us to collect comprehensive excitation
and emission spectra with high sensitivity and minimal laser damage to the specimens ..."
V. Baranyi et al. (2025):
Vegetation
and climate record across the Carnian Pluvial episode from the Transdanubian Range,
Hungary, Western Tethys. Free aaccess,
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 671.
Note figure 9: Schematic lithostratigraphic chart of the Carnian formations
in the studied areas in the Western Tethys realm and Central European Basin with the correlation
of marker palynological assemblages and ranges of selected taxa.
"... The quantitative and qualitative palynological data from three borehole
successions provided insight
into the Julian and early Tuvalian vegetation history of the study area
[...] The palynofloras point to aridification from later in the early Tuvalian, indicating the
waning of the pluvial phase ..."
L. Li et al. (2020):
Palaeovegetation
and palaeoclimate changes across the Triassic–Jurassic transition in the
Sichuan Basin, China. In PDF, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 556.
See here
as well.
"... Five palynological assemblages reveal significant ecosystem fluctuations across
the Triassic–Jurassic transition. Our study indicates a lowland fern flora and a warm
and humid climate in the Late Triassic (Norian to Rhaetian),
interrupted by a cooler interval at the Norian–Rhaetian transition, and followed by a
mixed mid-storey forest
under cooler and drier condition in the latest Rhaetian. This is followed by a fern-dominated
lowland vegetation and a warmer and drier climate during the Triassic–Jurassic transition,
and a flora with abundant cheirolepid conifers in the Hettangian–Sinemurian ..."
J.G. Pausas et al. (2015): Towards understanding resprouting at the global scale. Free access, New Phytologist.
!
J.B. Doran and A.M.F. Tomescu (2025):
On
the origin of euphyllophyte roots – hypotheses from an Early Devonian Psilophyton.
Free access, Annals of Botany, https://doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcaf121.
"... Well preserved Early Devonian (earliest Emsian) material from the Val d’Amour Formation
in New Brunswick (Canada) was freed from the rock matrix using acid. Over 2000 emergences from
28 randomly selected P. crenulatum axes were characterized qualitatively and quantitatively
in terms of morphology and distribution ..."
K. Pfeiler et al. (2025):
Expanded
character sampling inspired by a new Cretaceous conifer seed cone
from California: importance of morphology in resolving relationships
among the Cupressaceae. Open Access,
Annals of Botany. https://doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcaf099.
"... We describe a new cupressaceous fossil seed cone from the Early Cretaceous
[...] The new character matrix highlights the power of seed
cone characters in resolving phylogenetic relationships of fossil species, when combined with
tree topology constraints based on results of molecular phylogenetics ..."
TAPHOS 2011,
Institute of Geosciences, University of Tübingen.
The programme (in PDF) can be downloaded
here.
These expired links are now available through the Internet Archive´s
Wayback Machine.
A.B. Knetge et al. (2025): Census Collection of Two Fossil Plant Localities in Jameson Land, East Greenland Evidence Regional Ecological Turnover and Diversity Loss at the End-Triassic Mass Extinction See here as well.
!
B.C. Emerson and G.M. Hewitt (2005):
Phylogeography.
Free access, Current biology, 15.
"... Phylogeography [1] is a young and fast-growing field that
analyses the geographical distribution of genealogical lineages.
[] Today, a range of DNA techniques, combined with new analytical methods and recent
palaeoclimatic and geological studies are providing important insight into the distribution of
genetic diversity around the globe, and how it evolved ..."
J.C. Avise (2009):
Phylogeography:
retrospect and prospect. PDF file,
Journal of Biogeography, 36, 3-15.
See likewise
here.
L.B. Beheregaray (2008): Twenty years of phylogeography: the state of the field and the challenges for the Southern Hemisphere. Free access, Molecular Ecology, 17: 3754-3774.
Eman Soubani (2007),
Plant Ecology and Systematic Department, Lund University:
The
phylogeography of plants in Europe (PDF file).
Introductory literature.
Website outdated. The link is to a version archived by the Internet Archive´s Wayback Machine.
!
R.E. Plotnick et al. (2025):
Employment in
paleontology: status and trends in the United
States. Free access,
Paleobiology, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1017/pab.2024.59.
"... we have assessed recent trends
and current status of the supply of new paleontology doctorates and the number of available
positions. Overall, employment trends are downward ..."
!
G. Chomicki et al. (2017):
Evolution
and ecology of plant architecture: integrating insights from the fossil record, extant
morphology, developmental genetics and phylogenies. Free access,
Annals of Botany, 120: 855–891.
Note figure 9: Timeline of plant architectures and branching mechanisms through time.
"... This review focuses on endogenous processes that shape plant architectures
and their evolution ..."
E.J. Spagnuolo et al. (2024):
Reconstructing
the Botanical Past: Art and Paleobotany. In PDF,
Plant Science Bulletin, 70.
See here
as well.
"... we briefly review the history of paleobotanical art, discuss the challenges
when accurately depicting plants in paleoreconstructions, and highlight recent works
that reconcile isolated plant organs into scientifically accurate wholeplant and landscape-level
reconstructions ..."
A.J. Bowden (2025); starting on PDF page 12: A Brief Geological History of Horsetails. The Liverpool Geological Society.
B.E. Deloso et al. (2025): Missouri Botanical Garden's cycad collection: A journey through time. Open access, Plant Species Biology, 2025;1–18.
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