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         Paleobotany:     more books (100)
  1. Paleobotany, Second Edition: The Biology and Evolution of Fossil Plants by Thomas N. Taylor, Edith L. Taylor, et all 2008-12-29
  2. Principles of paleobotany by William Culp Darrah, 1960
  3. An Introduction To Paleobotany by Chester A. Arnold, 2008-11-04
  4. Paleobotany and the Evolution of Plants by Wilson N. Stewart, Gar W. Rothwell, 2010-01-14
  5. Paleobotany: An Introduction to Fossil Plant Biology by Thomas N. Taylor, 1981-11
  6. Sketch of paleobotany by Lester Frank Ward, 2010-07-30
  7. Paleobotany: Plants of the Past, Their Evolution, Paleoenvironment and Application in Exploration of Fossil Fuels by Shripad N. Agashe, 1997-04
  8. STUDIES IN PALEOBOTANY. by Henry N. Jr. Andrews, 1966-01-01
  9. Historical Perspective of Early Twentieth Century Carboniferous Paleobotany in North America: In Memory of William Culp Darrah (Memoir (Geological Society of America)) by Paul C. Lyons, William Culp Darrah, 1995-10
  10. Systematic and Taxonomic Approaches in Paleobotany (Systematics Association Special Volume) by R. A. Spicer, B. A. Thomas, 1987-02-26
  11. Contributions to the paleobotany of Peru, Bolivia and Chile; five papers by Edward Wilber Berry, 2010-08-18
  12. Contributions To The Paleobotany Of Peru Bolivia And Chile by E. W. Berry, 2009-04-14
  13. Paleobotany (Benchmark Papers in Systematic and Evolutionary Biology)
  14. Paleobotany; A Sketch of the Origin and Evolution of Floras by Edward Wilber Berry, 2009-12-21

1. VPL: Directory Page
An introductory look into the world of paleobotany. Designed as a teaching tool for a class at UC Category Science Biology Botany paleobotany...... VIRTUAL paleobotany. What are the synapomorphies for land plants? What doesit take? Is there a good synapomorphy for ferns? paleobotany links.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/IB181/VPL/Dir.html
[Lab I] [Lab II] [Lab III] [Lab IV] ... [Lab XII]
VIRTUAL
PALEOBOTANY What are the synapomorphies for land plants? What does it take? Secondarily reduced? How is it like a moss? A grade? What does it mean? A grade? Heterospory and the origin of seeds? Why sisters? Is this a good interpretation? Why is this node unresolved? Biogeography for members of this clade? Alternative topologies? What data support each? Double fertilization - what was the ancestral state? Age of the anthophytes and stratigraphic debt? Can we resolve this node? What about Zygopteris, Stauropteris, and Cladoxylon Is there a good synapomorphy for ferns?
Paleobotany links
[IB 181 Home] [Help Page]

2. UCMP Paleobotany Type Catalog And Collection Info
University catalog offers a searchable database of over 8 000 paleobotanical specimens. The UCMP paleobotany catalog (available online) contains information on over 22 000 specimens of fossil plants, algae,
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/collections/plant.html
UCMP Collections Vertebrates
Invertebrates

Microfossils

Paleobotany Paleobotany
Collection
About Our Holdings

Paleobotany Catalog Remote Catalogs
Botanical

Mycology

Phycology

Paleontology
Related Materials GeoRef Paleobotany Links
Paleobotany Collection: Catalogs and Information
The UCMP paleobotany catalog ( available on-line ) contains information on over 22,000 specimens of fossil plants, algae, and fungi catalogued through 2002. The paleobotany type collection contains specimens which were illustrated or referred to in a publication as representative of a particular form the author(s) studied. Primary types are the specimens chosen as nameholders when a species or subspecies is first described. These include the holotype (the primary nameholder of a species) and paratypes (additional specimens used in the original species description). Secondary types are additional specimens assigned to a species and include primarily hypotypes (those specimens figured) and homeotypes (unfigured specimens). Although the latter type categories are not formally recognized by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (ICBN), they generally represent additional well preserved specimens from the original collections. In addition, specimen data and images of UCMP's modern cleared leaf collection are now available on-line. The database has been checked, but may still contain errors.

3. Yale Peabody Museum: Paleobotany
Offers an overview of the museum's worldclass paleobotanical collection, and a searchable database of the fossils.
http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/pb
Paleobotany
Collection History Search the Collection Catalog The Manual of Leaf Architecture The Yale Peabody Museum's paleobotanical collection is world wide in scope with about 75% of the collection derived from North America and the other 25% from South America, China, West Indies, Israel, Lebanon, Pakistan, Central America, Australia, Antarctica, Europe and the Arctic. The approximate geological distribution of the collection is 30% Mesozoic, 32% Cenozoic, 33% Paleozoic and 5% Proterozoic. The taxonomic distribution is estimated as follows: 1% Cyanobacteria, 5% "Algae", 2% Bryophyta, 5% Lower Vascular Plants, 10% Progymnosperms, 10% Gymnosperms, and 67% Angiosperms. The collection is probably one of the oldest and most historically rich collections in the United States tracing its roots back to the early 19th century. Included among its riches is a substantial body of plant fossils from the opening of the American West, from the Wilkes Expedition of 1838-1842 described by James Dwight Dana, Triassic and late Cretaceous floras from New York, New Jersey and southern New England; and the world's largest assemblage of cycadeoids. The Peabody nucleus has grown rapidly during the past 13 years from approximately 30,000 specimens to over 125,000 specimens, 4,200 of these being type specimens. Part of this expansion is the result of intense field collecting by the Curator, Leo Hickey, and his students. The largest increase, however, is due to the addition of two orphaned collections: the collection of fossil plants from the New York Botanical Garden and a substantial part of the Princeton University paleobotanical collections. As a result of the collections varied history, these holdings contains material that formed the basis of the research of many of the founders of American paleobotany, including Leo Lesquereux, J. S. Newberry, E. W. Berry, W. M. Fontaine, Lester Ward, G. R. Wieland and Arthur Hollick.

4. Links For Palaeobotanists 1
Annotated links to internet resources, especially for palaeobotanists.Category Science Biology Botany paleobotany......Links for Palaeobotanists 1, Annotated links to internet resources,especially for palaeobotanists (Palaeobotany, paleobotany).
http://www.uni-wuerzburg.de/mineralogie/palbot1.html
Annotated links to internet resources,
especially for palaeobotanists (with an Upper Triassic bias).
Teaching Documents
Lecture Notes,
Quizzes, Taxa, ...
Home

Categories
Stephen T. Abedon , The Bacteriophage Ecology Group, Mansfield, Ohio State University, Columbus: Evolution of Plants . Brief lecture notes. Google : Reference > Museums > Science > Natural History George MacLeod , Dept. of Environmental Science, University of Stirling, Scotland: Micromorphology, Images (APP). The APP is an organization whose currently aprox. 150 members (mainly from Germany, Austria and Switzerland) share a common interest in various aspects of palaeobotany and palynology. For the APP member list, go to: pp 67, (PDF file). Deep Green - Green Plant Phylogeny Research Coordination Group (supported by National Science Foundation). The "Tree of Life" for plants. Two interactive versions are given: one is for reasearch and one is for teaching. Micro-Sys ApS , Viby, Denmark: Unit Convert . Unit Convert Online can be used for a wide variety of conversion needs, e.g. metric measurements, lengths, areas, weights, volumes, temperatures, and fluids. Kristina McGlaun , Jackson Creek Middle School: Bacteria to Plants . A link directory. John Adamek et al. (including fossil dealers):

5. Paleobotany Publishing Resources, Email, Web Hosting And Design Services
Publishing resources, email web hosting and designing services for Paleobotanists.
http://www.paleobotany.com/
Published Pages

6. Paleobotanical Section
This page was last built on 215-02. If you spot errors or have suggestions, please send a note to Chuck Daghlian.. The Section is also affiliated with the International Organization of paleobotany.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~daghlian/paleo
Part of the Botanical Society of America 's website.
Paleobotanical Section
Botanical Society of America
Updated: 11-09-00
The Paleobotanical Section, BSA is a member society of AGI, publishers of Geotimes
The Section is also affiliated with the International Organization of Paleobotany This page was last built on 2-15-02. If you spot errors or have suggestions, please send a note to Chuck Daghlian

7. Paleobotany And Palynology
paleobotany and Palynology. at the Florida Museum of Natural History
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/paleobotany/paleobotany.htm
Paleobotany and Palynology
at the Florida Museum of Natural History
Picture of Archaeanthus , a 100 million year old angiosperm.
Also, see the fossil.
Graduate degree programs in Paleontology and Paleobiology
Paleobotany and Palynology Graduate and Post Doctorate Students

Paleontological resources
...
Paleobotany/Palynology Image Gallery

The FLMNH Paleobotanical Collection includes approximately 105,000 specimens. This is a conservative estimate that does not take into account the fact that an individual hand sample may contain more than one fossil of interest. In addition, the facility houses the John W. Hall paleobotanical collection (approximately 20,000 specimens) currently on a long-term loan from the University of Minnesota. The collection is international in scope, ranging from the Proterozoic to the Pleistocene, and including collections from 26 countries. Particular strengths of the collection are: Cretaceous of the US western interior (~17,000 specimens), Cretaceous and Eocene of southeastern North America (~31,000 specimens), Eocene and Oligocene of the Pacific northwest (~19,500 specimens), and Pennsylvanian of Indiana and Illinois (~6,000 specimens). Systematically the greatest strength of the collection is in Cretaceous-Tertiary angiosperms, which are represented by large numbers of well-preserved fruits and flowers as well as leaves and wood. A majority of publications generated by the collection have dealt with angiosperm systematics, but publications also have been generated on algae, fungi, lycopods, ferns, seed ferns, conifers, and insect mines and have been used to address questions of phylogeny, paleogeography, and paleoclimate.

8. Hans' Paleobotany Pages
Website on fossil plants.
http://www.xs4all.nl/~steurh/home.html
Nederlandse versie
Hans' Paleobotany Pages
Taxodium at Ellecom (NL): a living fossil. This website is dedicated to fossil plants . It is more than 400 million years ago, in the Silurian, that the first land plants came into existence and the continents turned to green. This was the beginning of an amazing development, which created the terms for animal life on land.
On the basis of self-found fossils a view is given of plant life in the Silurian, the Devonian, the Carboniferous and the Permian. Enjoy the beauty and the multitude of forms of long vanished plants!
Small animals, living between the plants, are also considered.
And now a little bit Cretaceous!
CONTENTS
Silurian
Devonian
Silurian/Devonian
Silurian/Devonian
Devonian
Devonian
Devonian
Carboniferous* Carboniferous* Carboniferous* Carboniferous* Carboniferous* Carboniferous* Permian Cretaceous Pennsylvanian

9. Review Of Palaeobotany And Palynology
Online version of the Review of paleobotany and Palynology.
http://www.elsevier.com/inca/publications/store/5/0/3/3/5/9/
Home Search What's New
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Last update: 20 Mar 2003

10. Nan Crystal Arens
paleobotany, University of CaliforniaBerkeley.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/people/nan/nan.html
Nan Crystal Arens
Dr. Arens has relocated to: Department of Geosciences
Geneva, NY 14456 Tel. 315-781-3930 e-mail. arens@hws.edu

11. Yale Peabody Museum: Paleobotany, History
History of the paleobotany Collection. In 1866 JS Newberry was appointedto the chair of Geology and paleobotany at Columbia College.
http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/pb/History.html
History of the Paleobotany Collection
Search the Collection Catalog The Peabody Museum's Paleobotany collection is older than the Museum itself, which was founded in 1866 when George Peabody bequeathed money to Yale college to a build a museum of natural history. Benjamin Silliman, founder of geological science at Yale, assembled a teaching collection that included a substantial number of European fossil plants. Yale purchased this fossil collection after Silliman's retirement in 1850, and many of these specimens remain in the Museum's paleobotany collection. The Yale collection continued to grow throughout the late 1800's with the acquisition of several Cretaceous and Tertiary collections, including specimens from the Dakota Sandstone collected by Charles Sternberg from Ellsworth County, Kansas, a mid-late Cretaceous flora collection by W. H. Forwood in 1882 from Teton County, Wyoming and a collection of Tertiary specimens collected by Leander Davis and William Day during the 1870's from Bridge Creek, Oregon. In the early 1890's O. C. Marsh, the vertebrate paleontologist and the Peabody Museum's first director, began assembling a collection of cycadeoids. Aiding Marsh in this collection was Geoge R. Wieland, the Peabody's first paleobotanist. It is principally through Wieland's efforts that Yale ultimately accumulated a collection of 1,000 cycadeoid specimens, considered to be the world's largest collection of this extinct group of Mesozoic plants. Wieland retired in the 1940's, and the Museum was without a paleobotanist until 1962 when Theodore Delevoryas was appointed Associate Curator. During his ten year stay, Delevoryas expanded and enhanced the collection with specimens of Triassic and Jurassic cycadophytes. Following another hiatus in the Museum's paleobotanical curation, Bruce Tiffney assumed the position of Curator in 1977, adding several collections of Mesozoic and Tertiary flowering plants. In 1982, Leo Hickey came from the Smithsonian Institution to assume directorship of the Peabody Museum and to join Bruce Tiffney as Curator in Botany. Dr. Hickey brought with him, and he and his students continue to amass, major collections of Cretaceous and Tertiary angiosperm fossils. Dr. Tiffney left in 1986, leaving Dr. Hickey as Curator in charge of the paleobotanical collection.

12. Paleobotany In Antarctica
Documents the collection of Permineralized Fossil Plants from Jurassic Sediments of the Transantarctic Mountains, Southern Victoria Land.
http://sif.plantbio.ohiou.edu/antarctica/index.html
Paleobotany in Antarctica Collecting Permineralized Fossil Plants from Jurassic Sediments of the Transantarctic Mountains, Southern Victoria Land To: Other Paleobotanical Web Sites Last update: 12 Jan. 1998 by the Ohio University SCIENTIFIC IMAGING FACILITY Webmaster:Gar W. Rothwell ( rothwell@ohiou.edu

13. Araucariaceae Description
of the family, including geographic distribution, taxonomy, ethnobotany, and paleobotany.......
http://www.botanik.uni-bonn.de/conifers/ar/index.htm
Phylogenetic relationships within the Araucariaceae inferred from rbcL gene sequences (after Kershaw and Wagstaff 2001 choose a genus: Agathis Araucaria Wollemia Araucariaceae
Common Names
Araucaria family.
Taxonomic notes
Three genera with 40 species. Some authors elevate the family to the level of an order, Araucariales Heintze (1927). Relationships within the family, long contested (see the Agathis and Araucaria descriptions), have recently been elucidated by genetic (rbcL) analyses performed on 29 species within the family (Setoguchi et al. 1998). Phylogenetic trees for these analyses agree that all three genera are monophyletic and that Wollemia is the most primitive of the three. Within Araucaria , the four sections previously recognized ( Araucaria, Bunya, Eutacta , and Intermedia ) are supported, but relationships within Agathis remain somewhat unclear (see Agathis for more information). "The New Caledonian Araucaria and Agathis species each formed a monophyletic group with very low differentiation in rbcL sequences among them, indicating rapid adaptive radiation to new edaphic conditions, i.e., ultramafic soils, in the post-Eocene era" (

14. Paleobotany And Palynology Image Gallery - Page 1
paleobotany and Palynology Image Gallery.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/paleobotany/gallery/pg-1sm.htm
Paleobotany and Palynology Image Gallery
Next Last Publications Page Paleobotany Home
click on image to increase size
Pigg, K.B., R.A. Stockey and S.L. Maxwell. 1993. Paleomyrtinaea , a new genus of permineralized myrtaceous fruits and seeds from the Eocene of British Columbia and Paleocene of North Dakota. Canadian Journal of Botany

15. Rhynie Research Index
Details of the paleobotany from University of M¼nster.
http://www.uni-muenster.de/GeoPalaeontologie/Palaeo/Palbot/erhynie.html
P ALAEOBOTANICAL R ESEARCH G ROUP U NIVERSITY M T HE R HYNIE C HERT AND ITS F LORA I NDEX I. Introduction II. The Rhynie Chert Flora III. Rhynia and Aglaophyton IV. Vesicular Arbuscular Mycorrhizae V. The Alternation of Generations in Early Land Plants VI. Growth Forms of Aglaophyton and Rhynia VII. Nothia and Horneophyton VIII. Asteroxylon and Life Strategies of Early Land Plants IX. Fungi and non-vascular Plants X. Faunal Remains XI. Reconstructing a Fossil Ecosystem XII. Rhynie Chert Bibliography XIII. Rhynie Chert Links Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii April 2000

16. Dynamic Directory - Science - Biology - Botany - Paleobotany
and vegetation over recent geological time (the Quaternary period). Hans' paleobotany Pages Website on fossil plants.
http://www.maximumedge.com/cgi/dir/index.cgi/Science/Biology/Botany/Paleobotany
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Dynamic Directory Top Science Biology Botany :Paleobotany Description See also:

17. International Journal Of Plant Sciences
Research that seeks the answers to questions in all areas of the plant sciences. Topics covered include plantmicrobe interactions, development, structure and systematics, molecular biology, genetics and evolution, ecology, paleobotany, and physiology and ecophysiology. Founded in 1875 by John M. Coulter. Electronic edition.
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/IJPS/home.html
[Editors: Peter R. Crane, William E. Friedman, and M. Ruddat] ISSN: 1058-5893 International Journal of Plant Sciences Electronic Edition
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18. Paleobotany Links
paleobotanyrelated links. International Organization of paleobotany The internationalorganization of paleobotanists. Has links to many other sites.
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~daghlian/paleo/paleolinks.html
Part of the Botanical Society of America 's website. Index
Paleobotany Awards

Membership

Bibliography of American Paleobotany.
...
Officers and Bylaws

Paleobotany links
Paleobotany-related links.
University of California Museum of Paleontology , Berkeley, CA UCMP houses one of the world's largest holdings of Tertiary plant assemblages from western North America. To visit the collections or borrow material please contact Dr. Diane M. Erwin Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida A large (200,000+) collection of primarily Cretaceous and Tertiary material from southeastern United States and Western United States. Visitors and researchers are always welcome to use the collection. Loan requests should be directed to Dr. D.M. Jarzen Annotated links to internet resources, especially for palaeobotanists (with an Upper Triassic bias). This is a nice set of links for paleobotanists including fossil information, teaching, booksellers, etc. Also search links for finding paleobotanists around the world. Administrator of URL: Klaus-Peter Kelber, Institute of Mineralogy, University of Wuerzburg, Am Hubland, D-97074 Wuerzburg, Germany

19. Burnham, R.J.
Evolutionary paleobotany, University of Michigan.
http://www.ummp.lsa.umich.edu/paleobotany/rburnham/rburnham.html

20. Palaeontographica (since 1846)
Paleontographica is a scholarly journal publised in two series. Series A (Abt. A) is devoted to paleozoological papers while Series B (Abt. B) deals with papers on paleobotany. German and English.
http://www.schweizerbart.de/j/palaeontographica/E-palaeontographica.html
[ES home page] [order] [geology titles]
Palaeontographica
(Beiträge zur Naturgeschichte der Vorzeit) Palaeontographica publishes original monographic contributions of paleozoological contents of less than 80 printed pages in Palaeontgraphica's large format of 9.2 by 12.3 inches (23 x 31 cm) [instructions for authors] ) Its claim to fame is the large format and very high quality plates. Palaeontograpica is thematically subdivided in two Abteilungen (sections):
Abteilung A publishes papers on paleozoological and stratigraphic problems while papers published in Abteilung B deal with paleophytological (paleobotanical) problems and their application to stratigraphy.
Back issues of most of the issues listed below are still available today. Please contact us for availability and price.
A printed index of all papers published in Palaeontographica between 1846 and 1996 is available for DM 8,00/US$ 5.00 directly from the publisher ( order

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