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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Z. Lv et al. (2023): Overview of molecular mechanisms of plant leaf development: a systematic review. Free access, Frontiers in Plant Science, 14.
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 ..."
R.W. Gess and C. Berry (2024):
Archaeopteris
trees at high southern latitudes in the late Devonian. Open access,
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 331.
"... Archaeopteris, the quintessential Late
Devonian woody tree, has previously been identified at this locality on the basis
of leafy branch system fragments, though some uncertainty has remained as to whether
these represent tree sized organisms. Here we
present co-occurring large axes, including a trunk base, attributable to Archaeopteris
trees inferred to be in excess
of 20 m height, the first demonstration of forest stature at high latitudes in the Devonian ..."
C.K. Boyce (2010):
The
evolution of plant development in a paleontological context. In PDF
Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 13: 102-107.
See here
as well.
"... Contrary to what might be expected from the observation of
extant plants alone, the fossil record indicates that most
aspects of vascular plant form evolved multiple times during
their Paleozoic radiation. Opportunity is increasing to unite
information from fossil and living plants to understand the
evolution of developmental mechanisms ..."
!
E.M. Carlisle et al. (2024):
Ediacaran
origin and Ediacaran-Cambrian diversification of Metazoa. Open access,
Science Advances, 10. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adp716.
"... The timescale of animal diversification has been a focus of debate
over how evolutionary history should be calibrated to geologic time
[...] redating of key Ediacaran biotas and
the discovery of several Ediacaran crown-Metazoa prompt
recalibration of molecular clock analyses. We present
revised fossil calibrations and use them in molecular clock analyses estimating the timescale
of metazoan evolutionary history ..."
D. Agnihotri et al. (2024): Satpuraphyllum furcatum—a new genus and species of Peltaspermales foliage from the mid-Permian Barakar Formation of India. Free access, Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology, DOI: 10.1080/03115518.2024.2415097.
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Category:Artificial intelligence companies .
!
Category:Chatbots.
Category:Virtual
assistants.
!
Perplexity AI.
Kategorie:Künstliche Intelligenz (in German).
Kategorie:Suchmaschine
(in German).
Perplexity AI (in German).
Y. Fernández-Jalvo et al. (2011):
Taphonomy
in palaeoecological interpretations. In PDF,
Quaternary Science Reviews, 30: 1296-1302.
See likewise
here.
"... Too often taphonomy is viewed as destructive processes biasing evidence of
past life or restricting taxonomic diversity in the reconstruction of palaeoecology, but in reality it sheds light
on circumstances of life and preservation of fossil organisms
[...] taphonomic modifications
should be seen as providing a more dynamic view of the past rather than as
destructive processes ..."
!
S.F. López (1991):
Taphonomic
concepts for a theoretical biochronology. In PDF,
Spanish Journal of Palaeontology.
See likewise
here.
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: 111–176.
Arbeitskreis Bernstein
(Verein zur Förderung des Geologisch-Paläontologischen Museums
der Universität Hamburg). In German.
Worth checking out:
Amber of the month.
K. Feldberg et al. (2017): Problems related to the taxonomic placement of incompletely preserved amber fossils: transfer of the Paleogene liverwort Cylindrocolea dimorpha (Cephaloziellaceae) to the extant Odontoschisma sect. Iwatsukia (Cephaloziaceae). Free access, Fossil Record, 20: 147–157.
!
C. Yu et al. (2024):
Artificial intelligence in paleontology. Free access,
Earth-Science Reviews, 252.
"... The accumulation of large datasets and increasing data availability have led to the emergence of data-driven paleontological studies
[...] In this study, we review >70 paleontological AI studies since the 1980s
[...] we discuss their methods, datasets, and performance and compare them with more conventional AI studies ..."
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 ..."
E.M. Knutsen and D.A. Konovalov (2024):
Accelerating
segmentation of fossil CT scans through Deep Learning. In PDF,
Scientific Reports, 14.
See likewise
here.
"... Recent developments in Deep Learning have opened the possibility
for automated segmentation
of large and highly detailed CT scan datasets of fossil material
[...] we present a method for automated Deep Learning segmentation to obtain high-fidelity 3D models
of fossils digitally extracted from the surrounding rock, training the model with less than 1%-2%
of the total CT dataset ..."
!
A. Purvis and A. Hector (2000):
Getting
the measure of biodiversity. In PDF,
Nature, 405: 212–219.
See here
as well.
Aaron G. Filler, Department of Neurosurgery,
Institute for Nerve Medicine, Santa Monica, California:
The
History, Development and Impact of Computed Imaging in Neurological
Diagnosis and Neurosurgery: CT, MRI, and DTI (PDF file).
About Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, etc.
This expired link is now available through the Internet Archive´s
Wayback Machine.
V. Vajda and B.P. Kear (2024):
An
earliest Triassic riparian ecosystem from the Bulgo Sandstone (Sydney Basin), Australia:
palynofloral evidence of a high-latitude terrestrial vertebrate habitat after the end-Permian
mass extinction. Open access,
Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology, 48: 483–494.
Note figure 5: Reconstruction of the Early Triassic Bulgo Sandstone riparian ecosystem
with the lycopsid Pleuromeia (central foreground),
horsetails (left foreground) and other plants bordering waterways,
and Dicroidium constituting canopy vegetation (right foreground).
!
J.P. Fortin and W.E. Friedman (2024):
A
stomate by any other name? The open question of hornwort gametophytic pores, their
homology, and implications for the evolution of stomates. Free access,
New Phytologist.
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.20094.
"... We explore the occurrence and diverse functions of
stomates throughout the evolutionary history and diversity of
extinct and extant embryophytes. We then address arguments for
and against homology between known sporophyte- and
gametophyte-borne stomates and HGPs [hornwort
gametophytic pores] and conclude that there
is little to no evidence that contradicts the hypothesis of homology ..."
F.-Y. Li et al. (2024):
Arthropod
coprolites and wound reaction in the late Paleozoic climbing fern Hansopteris. Free access,
Palaeoentomology, 7: 628–637. DOI: 10.11646/palaeoentomology.7.5.6 .
"... Interactions between arthropods and plants have been documented
extensively in late Paleozoic
trees and ground cover plants, but they have rarely been recorded in late Paleozoic climbers
[...] This discovery provides an informative example of arthropod herbivory on late Paleozoic
climbers and sheds light on how the host plant responded during the early stage of injury ..."
!
V.K. Singh et al. (2022):
ResearchGate
and Google Scholar: How much do they differ in publications, citations and different metrics
and why? In PDF,
Scientometrics.
See likewise
here.
Z. Xu et al. (2024):
What
are the key factors influencing scientific data sharing? A combined application
of grounded theory and fuzzy-DEMATEL approach. Open access,
Heliyon, 10.
"... We combine grounded theory and information ecology theory to
construct a relatively comprehensive and effective model for SDS [scientific data sharing]
influencing factors ..."
J. Witteveen (2024): Golden spikes, scientific types, and the ma (r) king of deep time. Free access, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 106: 70-85.
G.B. Vai (2007): A history of chronostratigraphy. PDF file, in: McGowran, B. (ed.): Beyond the GSSP: New Developments in Chronostratigraphy: Stratigraphy, 4: 173–185.
F. Löcse (2022): „Achte auf die Etiketten!” Zum Wert sammlungsbegleitender Notizen. PDF-file, in German. Veröffentlichungen Museum für Naturkunde Chemnitz, 45: 213–217.
O. Catuneanu (2006):
Principles
of sequence stratigraphy. In PDF, Elsevier B.V.
See likewise
here
(Google books).
Z. Feng et al. (2024): Fossil evidence for silica biomineralisation in Permian lycophytes. Open access, National Science Review,
W.A. DiMichelle and R.A. Bateman (1996):
The
rhizomorphic lycopsids: a case-study in paleobotanical classification.
PDF file, Systematic Botany, 535-552.
See also
here.
J.W. Clark et al. (2023):
Evolution
of phenotypic disparity in the plant kingdom. Open access,
Nature Plants, 9: 1618-1626.
See likewise
here
(in PDF).
"... Phenotypic complexity correlates not with
disparity but with ploidy history, reflecting the role of genome duplication
in plant macroevolution. Overall, the plant kingdom exhibits a pattern of
episodically increasing disparity throughout its evolutionary history that
mirrors the evolutionary floras and reflects ecological expansion facilitated
by reproductive innovations ..."
! M.S. Ignatov et al. (2024): How to Recognize Mosses from Extant Groups among Paleozoic and Mesozoic Fossils. Open access, Diversity, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/d16100622.
Y. Na et al. (2024):
Fossil
charcoal from the Upper Triassic Karamay Formation in the Junggar Basin, NW China,
and its geological implications. In PDF,
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 321.
See likewise
here.
"... The presence of fossil charcoal in Junggar Basin suggests that
the paleoatmospheric oxygen level in northwest China during Late Triassic was above 13% or 15%, which is the
minimum required for sustained burning of natural wildfires. This finding is in accordance with the paleoatmospheric oxygen concentration models on the basis of variations in inertinite content and Phanerozoic wildfire history combined with the phosphorus cycle ..."
C. Mays (2020): Burning back the tree of life during the end-Permian mass extinction. Springer Nature Research Communities.
S. Slater (2020): Charcoal in the fossil record. Springer Nature Research Communities.
A.B. Schwendemann (2024):
A
leaf economics analysis of high-latitude Glossopteris leaves using a technique to estimate
leaf mass per area.
Evolving Earth, 2.
"... An analysis of the leaf mass per area (LMA) of late Permian Glossopteris leaves
from Antarctica gives several insights
into how these fossil leaves fit into functional groups and habitats compared to extant plants.
[...] When combined with the known effects of high CO2 and
continuous light conditions on
leaf LMA [leaf mass per area], the data suggest that the glossopterids living in these polar
latitudes had seasonally deciduous leaves
and adaptations that allowed them to thrive in a continuous light environment ..."
Keywords: Paleobotany, Palaeobotany, Paläobotanik, Paleophytologist, Paleophytology, Palaeophytologist, Palaeophytology, Paleobotánica, Paléobotanique, Paleobotânica, Paleobotanico, Palaeobotanica, Paleobotanika, Paleobotaniky, Paleobotanikai, Paleobotaniikka, Paleontology, Palaeontology, Paläontologie, Paleobotánica, Paleontológico, Paleobotânicos, Paleobotaników, Botany, Fossil Plants, Paleovegetation, Palaeovegetation, Palaeophyticum, Paleophyticum, permineralized plants, petrified, cuticle, cuticles, charcoal, Palynology, Palynologie, Taphonomy, Tafonomía, paleosoil, palaeosoil, mesophytic, mesophyticum, Paläovegetation, Pflanzenfossilien, Evolution, Phylogeny, Triassic, Trias, Triásico, Keuper, Ladinian, Carnian, Norian, Rhaetian, Index, Link Page.
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This index is compiled and maintained by
Klaus-Peter Kelber, Würzburg, e-mail kp-kelber@t-online.de Last updated November 20, 2024 |
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