
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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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 ..."
A. Ruffell et al. (2016):
The
Carnian Humid Episode of the late Triassic: a review. Abstract,
Geological Magazine, 153: 271-284. See also
here
(in PDF).
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
S.A.F. Darroch et al. (2025):
‘Earth system engineers’
and the cumulative impact of organisms in deep time. Open access,
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 40. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2025.08.005.
See here
as well.
"... we present a new framework applicable to both modern and ancient
engineering-type effects. We propose a new term – ‘Earth system engineering’ –
to describe biological processes that alter the structure and function of planetary
spheres ..."
The World of Teaching.
Over 1000 powerpoint presentations made by teachers are available for download.
Free Biology powerpoints. See e.g.:
Botany,
Photomicrographs,
Plant Tissues.
Lecture notes, Powerpoint presentation.
Now retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
!
H. Nakayama and N.R. Sinha (2025):
Leaf
evolution: integrating phylogenetics, developmental dynamics, and genetic insights across land plants. Open access, New Phytologist, 248: 2205–2220. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.70597.
See also here
(in PDF).
"... In this review, we focus
on the current understanding of leaf evolution by integrating phylogenetic relationships,
the developmental dynamics of the shoot apical meristem – the site of leaf initiation – and
comparative analyses of leaf morphogenesis in the context of key regulatory genes across
plant lineages ..."
E.M. Friis et al. (2011):
Early Flowers and Angiosperm Evolution.
Abstract, Cambridge University Press.
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. See also
here
(in PDF, long download time) and
there
(Google books). Also worth checking out:
Book Review,
by P.J. Rudall, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society,
170. In PDF.
"... This long-awaited book represents not only a remarkable tour de force of palaeobotanical literature, but also a potentially enduring biological textbook. ..."
W. Huang and X. Wang (2025):
Fossil
evidence of orchid-like dust seeds in Myanmar amber featuring early angiosperm radiation.
Open access, Scientific Reports, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-27211-6. See likewise
here (in PDF).
"... we report a group of well-preserved tiny seeds embedded in Myanmar amber
[...] The present discovery reflects that, during their mid-Cretaceous radiation,
at least some taxa adopted a strategy similar to that of extant orchids ..."
Z. Yuan et al. (2026):
Early
land plant evolution facilitated marine animal dispersal: Insights from
the Late Ordovician–Early Devonian microconchids. Abstract,
Earth-Science Reviews, 272. See here
as well (in PDF).
Note figure 1: Various animals perching on or attached to driftwood in the modern ecosystem.
"... Rafting is an effective biotic dispersal mechanism that enables organisms,
in particular the terrestrial and coastal
ones that are unable to survive in the open ocean, to cross the wide expanses of ocean basins.
Studies on modern
ecosystems show that floating remains of land plants could serve as dispersal vehicles for diverse organisms, from
microscopic fungi to large reptiles. This phenomenon has also been documented in the fossil record, as exem
plified by the Triassic crinoid Traumatocrinus colonies attached to driftwood ..."
! Y. Fukasawa (2021): Ecological impacts of fungal wood decay types: A review of current knowledge and future research directions. Open access, Ecological Research, 36: 907-1039.
W. Liu et al. (2025):
High-temperature
wood silicification: Constraints from fluid and carbonaceous inclusions in
quartz from Qitai, NW China. Open access,
Scientific Reports, 15.
See here
as well.
!
Note figure 1a: field photograph of a siliceous stump.
"... findings provide the first quantitative P–T constraints on wood fossilization,
revisit its thermal limits, and facilitate the study of wood fossil genesis
in volcanic environments
globally. Quantifying the P–T thresholds of wood silicification not
only renews models of plant fossil preservation but also provides insights into how forest fossils
reflect extreme palaeoenvironments ..."
M.G. Mángano et al. (2024):
Bioturbators
as ecosystem engineers in space and time. Open access,
Palaeontology, 67.
"... The trace-fossil record offers hard data to evaluate
bioturbation as a driving force in ecosystem re-structuring
and as a key factor in geobiological cycles. Models assessing
these fundamental issues should be rooted empirically at different scales,
from both autoecological and synecological to macroecological ..."
P. Hiller et al. (2024):
Evidence
of profuse bark shedding in Dicroidium seed ferns (Umkomasiales) from the
Triassic of Antarctica
Polar Research, 43.
See here
as well.
D. Frank et al. (2022):
Dendrochronology:
Fundamentals
and innovations.
PDF file, chapter 2 in R.T.W. Siegwolf et al. (eds): Stable isotopes in tree rings: Inferring physiological, climatic and environmental responses (pp. 21–59). Springer
International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-92698-4_2.
See likewise
here.
The Paleontological Society.
The Paleontological Society is an international nonprofit organization devoted to all
aspects of paleontology.
Their goal is to build a society that mirrors the diversity of our world, and we welcome
all kinds of paleontologists as members – professional, early career, student,
K-12 teacher, and avocational. Go to:
!
A Guide to Outreach:
Engaging the Public with Paleontology. In PDF.
The Alexander
von Humboldt Foundation.
The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation grants research fellowships
and research awards to highly qualified scholars and scientists
of all nationalities not resident in Germany, enabling them to
undertake periods of research in Germany, as well as research fellowships
to highly qualified German scholars, enabling them to spend periods of research
at the institutes of former Humboldt guest-researchers abroad.
Nature.com:
How
to construct a Nature summary paragraph (in PDF).
Available via Geomar Helmholtz-Zentrum für Ozeanforschung Kiel.
Annotated example taken from Nature 435, 114-118 (May 05, 2005).
!
H. Jurikova et al. (2025):
Rapid
rise in atmospheric CO2 marked the end of the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age. Open access,
Nature Geoscience, 18: 91–97. See likewise
here
(in PDF).
Note figure 3: Palaeozoic CO2 from different proxies.
Figure 5: The end of the LPIA [Late Palaeozoic Ice Age]and the dawn of the Early Permian warmth.
Palaeo-artistic rendering based
on findings of this study.
Life Sciences Outreach Program,
Harvard University,
Cambridge, MA:
The Life Sciences Outreach Program at Harvard University is
committed to enhancing high school biology education. Go to:
Teacher Materials,
Evolution.
Resources developed for classroom use by high school biology teachers.
Retrieved from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine.
Y. Liu et al. (2025):
Artificial
Intelligence in Paleobotany and Palynology. In PDF,
Geological Journal
See likewise
here.
Note table 1: Development of artificial intelligence in palynology studies
from the 1980s to 2025.
"... The integration of AI, encompassing expert systems, neural
networks, support vector machines, and other machine learning algorithms, has significantly
automated a variety of paleontological research workflows. The
application of AI in paleobotany involves multiple aspects
such as image classification, image segmentation and prediction ..."
M. Rigo et al. (2024):
Unveiling
a new oceanic anoxic event at the Norian/Rhaetian boundary (Late Triassic). Open access,
Scientific reports, 14. See here
as well.
"... The latest Triassic was characterised by protracted biotic extinctions concluding
in the End-Triassic Extinction (~200 Ma) and a global carbon cycle perturbation.
The onset of declining diversity is
closely related to reducing conditions that spread globally from upper Sevatian (uppermost Norian)
to across the Norian-Rhaetian boundary, likely triggered by unusually high volcanic activity ..."
D. Agnihotri et al. (2025): Satpuraphyllum furcatum—a new genus and species of Peltaspermales foliage from the midPermian Barakar Formation of India, Open access, Alcheringa, 49: 40-50. DOI: 10.1080/03115518.2024.2415097.
Z. Wei et al. (2025):
Resolving
the stasis-dynamism paradox: Genome evolution in tree ferns. Open access,
Molecular Biology and Evolution, 42.
"... Our findings redefine evolutionary stasis as a dynamic equilibrium, sustained by
regulatory plasticity and localized genomic innovation within a conserved morphological
framework. This study offers a novel genomic perspective on
the long-term persistence and evolution of ancient plant lineages ..."
T. Durieux et al. (2025): A rare permineralized Sphenophyllum (Sphenophyta, Sphenophyllales) stem containing abundant fungal remains from the Permian of Autun, central France. Open access, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 343.
!
F.E. Charles et al. (2025):
The
influence of changing fire regimes on specialized plant–animal interactions.
Open access, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B, 380: 20230448.
Note figure 1: Plant and animal morphological, behavioural and reproductive traits
involved in specialized plant–animal interactions in fire-prone ecosystems.
"... In this review, we identified mutualistic (pollination, seed dispersal and food provision),
commensal (habitat provision) and antagonistic (seed predation, herbivory
and parasitism) plant–animal interactions from fire-prone ecosystems
[...] Our synthesis reveals how fire regime changes impact
fire-dependent specialist plant–animal interactions and potentially drive
eco-evolutionary dynamics in fire-prone ecosystems globally ..."
P.R. Bierman et al. (2024):
Plant,
insect, and fungi fossils under the center of Greenland’s ice sheet are evidence of ice-free
times. Open access, The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS),
121. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2407465121
"... To understand better the history of Greenland’s ice, we analyzed glacial till collected
in 1993 from below 3 km of ice at Summit, Greenland ..."
Nan Crystal Arens (2025; illustrated by Julius Csotonyl, Sante Mazzei, Shuyu Hsu):
The
Princeton Field Guide to Mesozoic Plants. Google books.
See here
as well.
T.P. Vida et al. (2025):
A
taxonomic and paleoecological review of the Rhaetian
chondrichthyan fauna of Bonenburg (NRW) Germany. Open access,
PalZ, 99: 503–528.
Note figure 1: Palaeogeography of
western Europe during the
Rhaetian.
Figure 15: Reconstructed food web for the Rhaetian Contorta Beds
of Bonenburg.
!
N.S. Heckeberg et al. (2025):
Practical
guide and review of fossil tip-dating in phylogenetics. Open access,
Systematic Biology.
"... we provide an extensive review and overview of methods and models
for phylogenetic tip-dating analyses with fossils.
[...] We start with a survey of all published phylogenetic tip-dating studies to date,
showing common data and modeling choices
as well as trends toward new approaches. Then, we walk readers through
sections of molecular evolution, morphological
evolution ..."
M. Dolezych et al. (2025):
Middle Miocene
fossil woods from bentonite lagerstätten of the Bavarian Upper
Freshwater Molasse, Germany. In PDF,
Palaeontographica, B, 308: 77-105.
See here
as well.
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This index is compiled and maintained by
Klaus-Peter Kelber, Würzburg, e-mail kp-kelber@t-online.de Last updated December 12, 2025 |
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