
 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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What´s New on Links for Palaeobotanists?
A. Molina-Solís et al. (2025):
About
the diversification and heyday of Palaeophytic flora: new data and perspectives. Abstract,
Historical Biology.
See here
as well.
"The results reveal the major vegetation changes in Mississippian to Guadalupian times,
including the Palaeophytic–Mesophytic flora transition
[...] No relationship is seen between the balance of global origination–extinction rates and major ecological changes, such as the growth and decline of the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age,
or the collapse of the palaeotropical coal swamp biome ..."
R.A. Gastaldo et al. (2004):
Erect
forests are evidence for coseismic base-level changes in Pennsylvanian cyclothems of
the Black Warrior Basin, USA. PDF file,
in: J.C. Pashin and R.A. Gastaldo (eds):
Sequence stratigraphy, paleoclimate, and tectonics of coal-bearing strata.
AAPG Studies in Geology 51: 219-238.
See here 
as well.
!
J. Schiffbauer et al. (2025):
283,821
concretions, how do you measure the Mazon Creek? Assessing the paleoenvironmental and
taphonomic nature of the Braidwood and Essex assemblages. Free access,
Paleobiology 51, 488–506. https://doi.org/10.1017/pab.2025.10045
!
Note figure 14: Taphonomic model of Mazon preservation.
Figure 15: X-ray tomographic data of Mazon fossil concretions showing light image, 2D slice image, and 3D
renders of internal pyritization in both side and oblique profiles.
"... we revisit the paleoecology of the Mazon Creek biota by analyzing data
from nearly 300,000 concretions
[] These new insights also allow a refined taphonomic model, wherein
recalcitrant tissues of Braidwood organisms were subject to rapid burial rates,
while organisms of the
Essex assemblage typically had more labile tissues and were subject to slower burial rates ..."
 American Geosciences Institute (AGI),
Alexandria, Virginia.
 
AGI is a not-for-profit organization
dedicated to serving the geoscience community and addressing the needs of society. Go to:
!
Geologic
Guidebooks of North America Database.
Consists of references to geologic field trip guidebooks of North America (United States,
Canada, Mexico). Most of the guidebooks cited are from the period 1940 to the present.
A few are from earlier years.
A.S. Merdith et al. (2025):
Phanerozoic
icehouse climates as the result of multiple solid-Earth cooling mechanisms.
Free access, Science Advances, 11.
"... The Phanerozoic climate has been interrupted by two long “icehouse” intervals,
including the current icehouse of
the last ~34 million years.
[...] Our results indicate that recent icehouse climates required a combination of
different cooling mechanisms acting simultaneously and were
not driven by a single known process ..."
D.L. Royer et al. (2004):
CO2
as a primary driver of
Phanerozoic climate. In PDF,
GSA Today, 14: 1052-5173. See also
here.
Note figure 1: Details of CO2 proxy data set.
! Figure 2: CO2 and climate.
"... Here we review the geologic records of CO2 and glaciations
and find that CO2 was low (<500
ppm) during periods of long-lived and widespread continental glaciations and
high (>1000 ppm) during other, warmer periods ..."
!
W. Ding et al. (2025):
The
stepwise rise of angiosperm-dominated terrestrial ecosystems. Open access,
Biol. Rev., 100: 2131–2149.
doi: 10.1111/brv.70039.
!
Note figure 1: Stepwise evolution of angiosperms and angiosperm-dominated biomes in Earth history
during the Cretaceous and Cenozoic.
"... we summarize, based on fossils and molecular evidence, when and how
angiosperms came to diversify, dominate, and shape terrestrial ecosystems
[...] We highlight five major phases of angiosperm evolution that took place against
a background of palaeogeography and climate changes ..."
M. Kara et al. (2025):
Evaluating
the readability, quality, and reliability of responses generated by ChatGPT,
Gemini, and Perplexity on the most commonly asked questions about
Ankylosing spondylitis. Free access,
PLoS One,
"... This study aimed to make a comparative evaluation in terms of
the readability, information accuracy and quality of the answers given by artificial
intelligence (AI)-based chatbots such as ChatGPT, Perplexity and Gemini, which
have become popular with the widespread access to medical information
[...] Perplexity stood out in terms of information quality and reliability, receiving higher
scores compared to other chat robots ..."
A. Elek et al. (2025):
Evaluating
the Efficacy of Perplexity Scores in Distinguishing AI-Generated
and Human-Written Abstracts. Abstract,
 Academic Radiology, 32: 1785-1790.
"... This study underscores the potential of perplexity scores in detecting AI-generated
and potentially fraudulent abstracts ..."
M. Shukla et al. (2024):
A
Comparative Study of ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity. Free access,
International Journal of Innovative Research in Computer Science and Technology, 12:
2347-5552. https://doi.org/10.55524/ijircst.2024.12.4.2.
"... This research work presents comparatively analysis of the three Generative Artificial
Intelligence (AI) tool, namely ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity AI, based on the content generation,
ownership and developing technology, context understanding, transparency, and
information retrieval ..."
F.R. Blattmann et al. (2025):
Wildfire,
ecosystem, and climate interactions in the Early Triassic. Free access,
Communications Earth & Environment
See here
as well (in PDF).
"... we explore wildfire during the Early Triassic (Smithian
and Spathian, ca. 250 million years ago) – a time interval characterized by scarce fire evidence,
perturbation of the carbon cycle, climatic oscillations,
vegetation succession and biotic radiationextinction pulses – using polyaromatic
hydrocarbons, which are an organic (geo)chemical fire
indicator in sediments ..."
G. Pacyna et al. (2017): A new conifer from the Upper Triassic of Southern Poland linking the advanced voltzialean type of ovuliferous scale with Brachyphyllum/Pagiophyllum-like leaves. Abstract, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 245: 28-54. See also here (in PDF).
S. Lidgard and E. Kitchen (2025):
Living
Fossil: A Metaphor's Travels Across Popular Culture and the Foundations of Darwinian
Evolution and Anthropology. Free access,
Journal of the History of Biology, 58: 163–213.
See here
as well.
 "... We explore the development and relationships of living
fossil applications, focusing principally on Darwin’s concept
In Origin, Darwin
deployed living fossils as exceptions that prove the rule of his
principles of natural selection and divergence ..."
T. Hazra et al. (2021): First fossil evidence of leaf-feeding caterpillars from India and their feeding strategies. Free access, Lethaia, 54: 891–905.
Plantscience4u:
A website that provides educational resources on plant science. Go for example to:
 General Topics.
S. Müller et al. (2025):
 Coating
  of microscope slide labels: a possible solution for their long-term preservation. In PDF,
Natural History Collections and Museomics, 2: 1–9.
See here
as well.
S.K. Donovan and M. Riley (2013): The importance of labels to specimens: an example from the Sedgwick Museum. In PDF, The Geological Curator, 9: 509.
B.E. Boudinot et al. (2024): Et latet et lucet: Discoveries from the Phyletisches Museum amber and copal collection in Jena, Germany. In PDF, Dtsch. Entomol. Z., 71. DOI 10.3897/dez.71.112433.
P.N. Wyse Jackson (2013): Permanency of labelling inks: A 25-year experiment. In PDF, The Geological Curator, 9: 507.
!
M.P. D'Antonio (2025):
Convergent
evolution of the developmental anatomy of leaf abscission: evidence from the arboreous
lycopsid Sigillaria. Free access,
Annals of Botany. ttps://doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcaf188.
"... we investigate using microscopy permineralized leaf cushions of the arboreous lycopsid
Sigillaria approximata with and without articulated leaves
[...] Despite the similarities between leaf abscission in
Lepidodendrales and leaf abscission in extant euphyllophytes,
these represent distantly related plant groups separated in time
by 300 million years ..."
ScienceDirect:
Paleobotany.
This website is created by ScienceDirect using heuristic and
machine-learning approaches to extract relevant information.
G. Geyer and J. Sell (2025): Norestheria (Spinicaudata, Crustacea): Morphology and its stratigraphical and geographic significance. Palaeontologia Electronica, 28. https://doi.org/10.26879/1564.
!
H. Sanei et al. (2024):
Assessing
biochar's permanence: An inertinite benchmark. Free access,
International Journal of Coal Geology, 281.
"...  This study applies the well-established optical and compositional
characteristics of inertinite maceral, long defined by organic petrology
and geochemistry disciplines, as a benchmark of the geological permanence
for biochar. The well-calibrated and standardized tools commonly
used by geologists for quantifying the level of organic carbon evolution
have been re-introduced as new methods for measuring the degree of
carbonization with respect to the inertinite benchmark ..."
J. Chu et al. (2025):
Occurrence
of wildfire in peat/coal forming periods and its influence on paleoclimate in the
Permo-Carboniferous. Open access,
Energy Exploration & Exploitation, 3. https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598725131424.
"... This article reviews the historical significance of wildfires during the
Permo-Carboniferous period
and their connection to charcoal, inertinite and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons ..."
S, Murthy et al. (2025):
Palynofloral
and geochemical evidence for Permian-Triassic transition from Talcher Coalfield,
Son-Mahanadi Basin, India: Insights into age,
palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and palaeowildfire Free access,
Geoscience Frontiers, 16.
"... the present study analysed the palynology, palynofacies, organic geochemistry (biomarkers),
stable isotopes, and charcoal within the subsurface Gondwana deposits of the Kamthi
Formation (late Permian-early Triassic) ..."
R. Neregato and R. Rohn (2025):
A
New Late Permian Sphenophyte Strobilus in the Paraná Basin, Brazil. In PDF.
 
See here
as well.
V.A. Korasidis and B.E. Wagstaff (2025):
Cool-temperate
riparian floras in the Early Cretaceous rift valley of Victoria, Australia. Open access,
Alcheringa. https://doi.org/10.1080/03115518.2025.2489614.
Note figure 14: Reconstruction of cool-temperate rainforest and fluvial environments in southeast Australian during the late Albian.
"... we studied 291 palynological samples from 48 sites in the Otway and
Gippsland basins. Podocarpaceae represent the major component of the open canopy forests ..."
S. Kock and M.K. Bamford (2025):
Fossil
wood from the Permian-Triassic Beaufort Group of South Africa's Karoo Basin:
Implications for palaeoclimate. Free access,
Earth History and Biodiversity, 5.
"... Tree-growth rings act as high-resolution climate proxies because wood anatomy is directly related to water
uptake and tree growth. 190 silicified wood samples representing three taxa from the main Karoo Basin of South
Africa were analysed ..."
L. Liu et al. (2025):
Ordovician
marine Charophyceae and insights into land plant derivations. In PDF,
Nature Plants, 11.
See likewise
here.
Note figure 4: Morphological and palaeoecological reconstructions of
Tarimochara miraclensis gen. et sp. nov.
M. Barbacka et al. (2025):
Late
Jurassic plant fossils from Wólka Baltowska (Holy Cross Mountains, Poland). Free access,
Annales Societatis Geologorum Poloniae, 95.
See likewise
here.
!
J.W. Clark and P.C.J. Donoghue (2025):
Uncertainty
in the timing of diversification of flowering plants rests with equivocal
interpretation of their fossil record.
 R. Soc. Open Sci., 12: 242158. https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.242158.
See likewise here.
"... We show that the disagreement between molecular and
palaeobotanical estimates is an artefact of interpretations of the fossil record
[...] Attention should be refocused on the history of stem-angiosperms in
which the body plan of this most successful lineage of land
plants was assembled ...
D. Quiroz-Cabascango et al. (2025):
Earliest
Jurassic plant assemblages from Sweden reveal a low-diversity ginkgoalean and
cheirolepid flora dominating the post-extinction landscape. Free access,
Annals of Botany. https://doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcaf143.
Note figure 9A: Centimetre-scale charcoalified wood fragments in feldspathic sandstone.
"The low-diversity post-extinction recovery forests of the earliest Jurassic were dominated
by ginkgoopsids, cheirolepid conifers and ferns, growing under seasonal mesothermal conditions.
 Dispersed charcoal indicates wildfires were present in the landscape at this time ..."
H. Nguyen and V.K. Huong (2025):
Integrating
Plant Fossil Proxies and Biomarkers to Reconstruct Deep-Time Paleoclimate,
Paleoecology, and Evolutionary Dynamics. In PDF,
Scientific Research Journal of Biology and Life Science, 3.
"... This paper reviews and synthesizes evidence from plant fossil records—particularly
fossil leaves and resins— and their associated biomarkers, along with geological
and paleogeographic data, to reconstruct past climates and ecosystems ..."
B. Adroit et al. (2025): Editorial: 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
S. Pla-Pueyo and E.H. Gierlowski-Kordesch (2025):
Wetlands
as environments of early human occupation: A new classification
for freshwater palaeowetlands. Open access,
The Depositional Record. DOI: 10.1002/dep2.327.
"... A new classification for inland freshwater palaeowetlands, with a focus on carbonate
wetlands, is proposed here, recognising key features that
an be preserved in the fossil record ..."
D.M. Njoroge et al. (2025):
The
effects of invertebrates on wood decomposition across the world. In PDF,
Biological Reviews, 100: 158-171. https://doi.org/10.1111/brv.13134.
See likewise
here.
"...  we investigated what drives the invertebrate effect on wood decomposition worldwide.
Globally, we found wood decomposition rates were on average approximately 40% higher when
invertebrates were present compared to when they were excluded. This effect was most pronounced
in the tropics, owing mainly to the activities of termites ..."
!
S. Magallón et al. (2025):
A
metacalibrated time-tree documents the early rise of flowering
plant phylogenetic diversity. Free access,
New Phytologist, 207: 249-479.
Note figure 1: Molecular and fossil-based estimates of angiosperm age.
 
"... A large number of fossil-derived calibrations and a confidence
interval on angiosperm age have been combined in relaxed clock
analyses to provide a time-frame of angiosperm evolution. The
maximum age of the onset of diversification of angiosperms into
their living diversity has been calculated with high confidence to
lie in the Early Cretaceous ..."
F.R. Badenes-Pérez (2025): Plant–Insect Interactions: Host Plant Resistance, Biological Control, and Pollination. Open access, Plants, 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/plants14101488.
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