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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Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, Canada: The Early Paleozoic World: the Cambrian explosion of life. Lecture notes, Powerpoint presentation.
N. Barbolini (2014):
Palynostratigraphy
of the South African Karoo supergroup and correlations with coeval Gondwanan successions.
In PDF, Thesis, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. See also
here.
Now recovered from the Internet Archive´s
Wayback Machine.
A. Fijalkowska-Mader (2015):
A
record of climatic changes in the Triassic palynological spectra from Poland. In PDF,
Geological Quarterly, 59.
See also
here.
P. Huang et al. (2025):
The
smallest Zosterophyllum plant from the Lower Devonian of South China and
the divergent life-history strategies in zosterophyllopsids. Open access,
Proc. R. Soc. B, 292.
Note figure 2: Diversity and morphology of Zosterophyllum species through the late Silurian to Early Devonian.
!
Figure 4: Artist’s restoration of part of the Early Devonian Mangshan flora, with
plant communities of Zosterophyllum baoyangense sp. nov. at the front, and Teyoua
antrorsa, Zosterophyllum australianum and an unnamed zosterophyllopsid to the back.
!
D.J. Batten and D.T. Stead (2005):
Palynofacies
analysis and its stratigraphic application
Applied stratigraphy, p. 203-26
See likewise
here.
!
R.V. Tyson (1993):
Palynofacies
analysis. In PDF,
Applied micropalaeontology, chapter 5, p. 153-191.
See
here
as well.
!
K.A. Holt and K.D. Bennett (2014):
Principles
and methods for automated palynology. Free access,
New Phytologist, 203. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.12848.
"... In this paper, we provide the first review in over
15 yr of progress towards automation of the part of palynology concerned with counting and
classifying pollen ..."
Canadian Association of Palynologists (CAP).
Worth checking out:
CAP Library and Resources.
N. Aggarwal et al. (2025):
Unraveling
the Charred Past: Microscopic Insights and Advanced Techniques in Understanding Permian
Palaeofires. Free access, ACS Omega,
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.4c08281.
"... This study conducts a comprehensive palynofacies and
geochemical analysis to characterize organic matter (OM) in shale
samples
[...] The present investigation helps to explore the difference
between the origins (in situ vs ex situ) of the charcoal
generated due to the oxidation or palaeofire activity ..."
PC MAG
(belongs to the trademark of Ziff Davis):
!
Perplexity
Launches a Free 'Deep Research' AI Tool.
By Jibin Joseph, February 17, 2025.
"... Perplexity’s Deep Research tool can fetch information from hundreds of sources
“to autonomously deliver a comprehensive report ..."
CNBC :
U.S.
Navy bans use of DeepSeek due to ‘security and ethical concerns’.
Deutscher Museumsbund e.V.:
Naturwissenschaftliche
Museen (in German).
The Group for Natural History Museums represents the specific interests of
Natural History Museums and museums with collections on nature in the
German Museums Association. Note especially:
!
Natural
Science Museums in Germany with their own website (in German).
G. Amorós and J.S. Carrión (2024): The kitsch dimension of paleoart. In PDF, https://dx.doi.org/10.5209/aris.97299.
C. McNulty (2017): Paleoimagery: The Artistic Restoration of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Life In PDF, Bowling Green State University. Note here as well.
R. Koch (2022): Die Nutzung von Naturwerksteinen in Erlangen im Spiegel der industriellen und politischen Entwicklung. PDF file, in German. Geologische Blätter, 70: 97-164. https://doi:10.23689/fidgeo-5390.
!
M. Özcan et al. (2012):
Possible
hazardous effects of hydrofluoric acid and recommendations for
treatment approach: a review. In PDF,
Clin Oral Invest (2012) 16: 15–23.
Note here
as well.
Victor Cojocaru:
Can
anyone recommend me some phase diagram software?
ResearchGate, March 19, 2014.
Andrea Hernandez:
The
Best 8 Free and Open Source Diagram Software Solutions.
GoodFirms, February 16, 2025.
S. Bengtson (2000):
Teasing
Fossils out of Shales with Cameras and Computers.
Palaeontologia Electronica, 3.
"... Simple yet effective methods are available (using Adobe Photoshop) to enhance photographic
images of low-contrast and low-relief specimens, such as fossils in shales,
without manipulating or retouching the photographs. By applying polarizing
filters to camera and light-source(s) in a way analogous to crossing nicols in
a petrographic microscope, dramatic results can be achieved where there
is a difference in reflectance between fossil and matrix, as with many
coalified fossils ..." Excellent!
Y. Xu etv al. (2024):
Revision
of Sagenopteris (Caytoniales): a major lineage of the Mesozoic seed plants. Open access,
Papers in Palaeontology, 10.
Note figure 3: Reconstructions of Sagenopteris acuminata illustrating its morphological
variation through developmental (seasonal) series.
"... Temporo-spatial analysis of Sagenopteris suggests it originated in the European
(palaeo-subtropical) region by the Anisian (Middle Triassic) and underwent significant
range expansion during the Late Triassic. Surviving the end-Triassic mass extinction,
Sagenopteris quickly became one of the dominant gymnosperms
in the aftermath of the biotic crisis
[...] The youngest occurrences of Sagenopteris, globally, are from Cenomanian–Campanian
assemblages ..."
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:e16426.
Note figure 3: Precipitation and surface temperature plots from geologic time periods
(A–D) middle Miocene, (E–H) early Eocene, and (I–L) Cretaceous.
"... We tested climatic niche conservatism across time by characterizing the
climatic niches of living herbaceous ginger plants (Zingiberaceae) and woody dawn
redwood (Metasequoia)
[...] Because of the inconsistent climatic niches of Zingiberaceae over geologic time,
we are less confident of using them for taxonomic-based paleoclimatic
reconstruction methods
[...] we argue that the consistent climatic niche
of Metasequoia is more appropriate for these reconstructions. Niche conservatism
cannot be assumed between extant and extinct plants and should be tested further ..."
Links for Palaeobotanists:
!
Translation Tools.
Mathpolate:
Graph
Paper Generator.
Free graph paper maker tools to make your own custom grid and graph paper
printable. Generate lined pages, grid page, graph papers, dotted grid,
isometric grid, hexagon grid and many more.
!
I.J. Glasspool and R.A. Gastaldo (2024):
Don't
mind the “charcoal gap”: A reassessment of Devonian wildfire. Open access,
Geology, 42: 846–850.
!
Note figure 1: Global records of Silurian–Devonian fire.
"... We conclude there is ample evidence of fire in the Middle Devonian. This interval
is not innately of low pO2.
[...] we propose that pO2 achieved levels >16%
and remained at such levels from the Silurian through the floral and faunal colonization of
land and, from our current estimates, stayed as such until the present ..."
Alex York, ClickUp:
10
Best Writing Assistant Software With AI in 2025.
January 30, 2025.
!
D. Uhl et al. (2024):
Deep-time
maar lakes and other volcanogenic lakes as Fossil-Lagerstätten–An overview. In PDF,
Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, 104: 763–848.
See here
as well.
"... Maar lakes and other volcanogenic Konservat-Lagerstätten occur in a large number of
volcanically active regions worldwide, although older deposits are often difficult to access
as they are more likely to be eroded or covered by younger deposits.
[...] Although currently some of these deposits have at least some kind of legal protection
as monuments of natural heritage, others remain in danger of being exploited commercially
for natural resources and hence, ultimately destroyed ..."
G.R. Shi and J.B. Waterhouse (2010):
Late
Palaeozoic global changes affecting high-latitude environments and biotas: an introduction.
In PDF, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 298: 1-16.
See here
as well.
Note figure 4 (A)–(C): Palaeogeographic evolution of the world from
early Carboniferous to Late Permian.
"... This introductory paper is designed to provide a global context for the
special issue, with a brief review of
key late Palaeozoic global environmental changes (including: changes in
global land-sea configurations,
atmospheric chemistry, global climate regimes, global ocean circulation
patterns and sea levels) and largescale biotic (biogeographic and evolutionary)
responses, followed by a summary of what we see as
unresolved scientific issues ..."
M. Laaß and R. Rößler (2024):
Kapitel 12:
Tier-Pflanze-Interaktionen. PDF file, in German, in:
R. Werneburg and J.W. Schneider (eds.):
Die
Rotliegend-Fauna des Thüringer Waldes.
See also
Palökologie
im Karbon und Perm des Thüringer-Wald-Beckens.
R.J. Carpenter and S. McLoughlin (2025): A new leaf species of Proteaceae and other Gondwanan elements from the early Paleogene Lota–Coronel flora of south–central Chile. In PDF, Australian Systematic Botany, 38.
E.D. Lukashevich (2023): Where the immatures of Triassic Diptera developed. Open access, Diversity, 15. https://doi.org/10.3390/d15040582.
C. Brauckmann and T. Schlüter (1993): Neue Insekten aus der Trias von Unter-Franken. PDF file, in German. Geologica et Palaeontologica, 27: 18 1- 199.
M. Wuttke et al. (2024): Pollen-feeding in a giant pelobatid tadpole from the late Oligocene of Enspel, Germany. In PDF, Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, 104: 999–1026. See here as well.
S. Lidgard and E. Kitchen (2023):
Revealing the
rise of a living fossil menagerie. Free access,
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 11:1112764.
doi: 10.3389/fevo.2023.1112764.
"... In this paper we attempt the first comprehensive analysis
of the use of the term ‘living fossil’ from 1860 to the present
[...] We argue that
the demonstrated persistence, ever-expanding scientific and public interest, and
future utilization of living fossils reflects increasingly complex challenges
to deepseated expectations at the heart of a living fossil research agenda: omnipresent
evolutionary change and inevitable disappearance or extinction ..."
L.A. Giraldo et al. (2024):
Fossil
insect-feeding traces indicate unrecognized evolutionary history and biodiversity
on Australia's iconic Eucalyptus. Free access,
New Phytologist. https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.20316.
"... We studied the insect herbivore damage found on 284 Eucalyptus frenguelliana
leaves from the early Eocene Laguna del Hunco rainforest locality in Argentinean Patagonia
and compared damage patterns with those observed on extant, rainforest-associated
Eucalyptus species from Australasia
[...] The finding of all the fossil damage types on extant Eucalyptus specimens suggests
long-standing associations between multiple insect herbivore lineages and their host
genus spanning 52 million years across the Southern Hemisphere ..."
! G. Fraser (2025): DeepSeek vs ChatGPT - how do they compare? BBC.com.
! R. Law (2024): I Reviewed the Best AI Search Engines for 2025. Ahrefs.com.
! M. Pavitra (2024): Die 12 besten KI-Suchmaschinen, die Sie im Jahr 2025 ausprobieren müssen. In German, clickup.com.
J.S. Ferraz et al. (2025): The Calm Before the Storm: A Diverse Paleoflora from the Guadalupian of Western Gondwana. Free access, http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5114239.
Department of Botany,
University of Wisconsin, Madison:
Plant
Systematics Collection.
This web site provides structured access to a teaching collection of plant images representing over 250 families and 1000
genera of vascular plants. Go to:
Lycophyta.
Lycopodiaceae,
Selaginellaceae,
Isoetaceae.
H. Hashemi et al. (2024):
New
Odonatan oviposition ichnotaxa from the Lower Jurassic of Iran
Swiss Journal of Palaeontology, 143. See
here
as well.
"... Distinct, new oviposition lesion types, Paleoovoidus pyriformis ichnosp. nov.
and Variomorphonotatus sagittaeformis
ichnogen. et ichnosp. nov., occurring on two fossil compression Cycadophyte
leaves from the Lower Jurassic
Shemshak Formation of western Alborz Ranges, northern Iran are documented
[...] the ichnotaxa documented herein offer unequivocal evidence to
the presence of the Odonatan representatives
in the Early Jurassic riparian ecosystems of northern Iran ..."
!
American Society of Botanical Artists (ASBA).
The ASBA is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting public awareness
of contemporary botanical art, to honoring its traditions, and to furthering its
development. Worth checking out:
Member Gallery.
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This index is compiled and maintained by
Klaus-Peter Kelber, Würzburg, e-mail kp-kelber@t-online.de Last updated February 21, 2025 |
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