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         Paleobotany:     more books (100)
  1. Paleobotany; A Sketch of the Origin and Evolution of Floras by Edward Wilber Berry, 2009-12-21
  2. Contributions to the Paleobotany of Peru by Edward Wilber Berry, 2010-03-28
  3. Paleobotany: Plants of the Past, Their Evolution, Paleoenvironment and Application in Exploration of Fossil Fuels by Shripad N. Agashe, 1997-04
  4. Sketch of paleobotany by Lester Frank Ward, 1885-01-01
  5. The Cretaceous age of the Vinegar Hill silica sand deposit, southern New Brunswick: evidence from palynology and paleobotany.: An article from: Atlantic Geology by Howard J. Falcon-Lang, Robert A. Fensome, et all 2003-03-01
  6. Index of generic names of fossil plants, 1820-1950, based on the Compendium index of paleobotany of the U.S. Geological Survey ([United States.] Geological Survey. Bulletin) by Henry Nathaniel Andrews, 1955
  7. Patterns in Paleobotany: Proceedings of a Czech-U.S. Carboniferous Paleobotany Workshop by R. L. Leary, 1996-01-01
  8. Paleobotany Part I Precambrian Thru Perm (Paleobotany) by Thomas N. Taylor, Edith L. Smoot, 1997-06
  9. Paleobotany: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by Bill Freedman, 2004
  10. Paleobotany of Porto Rico. by ARTHUR HOLLICK, 1928-01-01
  11. Contributions to the paleobotany of middle and South America, (The Johns Hopkins University studies in geology) by Edward Wilber Berry, 1939
  12. Paleobotany Introduction: Pteridospermatophyta, Bennettitales, Chaetocladus, Eohostimella, Submerged Forest, Pecopteris, Hymenaea Protera
  13. Contributions to the Paleobotany of Peru, Bolivia and Chile, Five Papers by Edward W. Berry. by EDWARD W. BERRY, 1922-01-01
  14. Principles of Paleobotany, Second Edition by William C. Darrah, 1960

21. 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

22. Paleobotany Publishing
To begin publishing on www.paleobotany.com, send an Email to the webmasterand we will get you started. Comments webmaster@paleobotany.com.
http://www.paleobotany.com/publish.html
To begin publishing on www.paleobotany.com, send an E-mail to the webmaster and we will get you started. Publishing Information
    You can publish your important information, ideas or research, here at www.paleobotany.com. Our services allow independents and academics to publish:
    • Papers
    • Field Research
    • Thesis
    • Sems, Photograhs
    • Online Exhibits
    • Books You can Publish almost anything relating to the discipline of Paleobotany.

    The WorldwideWeb is a vast resource of information on practically any subject you can think of, however, there are few useful sites for Paleobotanists. We believe that this site will offer a friendly experience for an audience of web surfers seeking your information.
    You will notice that there are no ByLaws, Censors, or University guidelines to inpede publishing your information. All that is required to publish on paleobotany.com is a small setup fee to cover overhead for the site.
    Comments: webmaster@paleobotany.com

23. Agathis Australis Description
, range, dendrochronologic studies, ethnobotany, and paleobotany.......New Zealand kauri tree
http://www.botanik.uni-bonn.de/conifers/ar/ag/australis.htm
Tane Mahuta, currently thought to be the largest living kauri, in Waipoua Forest ( Lightbody 1996
Mature tree in Warkworth Kauri Park, New Zealand [Trevor Hinchliffe,
Distribution map ( Metcalf 2002
Crown of a tree in Waipoua Forest Reserve [Trevor Hinchliffe,
Foliage and cone (Hortus Botanicus Catinensis 2000).
Adult foliage [Trevor Hinchliffe,
Juvenile foliage on a tree in Waipoua Forest Reserve [Trevor Hinchliffe,
Bark on a tree in Waipoua Forest Reserve [Trevor Hinchliffe,
Bark on a tree in the forest, Waipoua Forest Reserve [Trevor Hinchliffe, Agathis australis (D. Don) Loudon 1829
Common Names
Kauri, New Zealand kauri.
Taxonomic notes
Syn: Dammara australis (D. Don) Lamb. 1824, Podocarpus zamiifolius A. Rich. 1832 ( Farjon 1998
Description
Allan 1961 Silba 1986 , pers. obs. Mar-2003). The reproductive cycle extends over 19-20 months from pollination in October to seed maturity in February or March of the second year following ( Owens et al. "A tree twenty-five to thirty years old may begin to bear fertile seeds. When the female cone is ripe the scales open, releasing the winged seeds which are borne away by the wind. Seeds remain viable for only a short period, and usually germinate when they settle in an open situation where light can penetrate readily. "The spreading crown of the kauri is, relative to the trunk, immense; it is rather open as the tree ages and is supported on huge branches that appear simply to swell out of the upper trunk. The first or lower of these branches can be up to 2 m through where they leave the trunk. Kauri trees are rather slow growing over their life span although young trees have been recorded as growing at the rate of 0.35 m per year. ... Young kauri trees ... are known as "rickers". They persist in this juvenile form for fifty years or more and can attain a considerable height with their tall thin trunks and narrow pyramid shaped crowns" (

24. Paleobotany GL 310 Syllabus
Sorry, this document can be viewed only with Netscape NavigatorV. 2 or later. Use this link to GL 310's Syllabus.
http://www.colby.edu/~ragastal/Paleobotany/paleoframes.html
link to GL 310's Syllabus.

25. PALEOBOTANY
paleobotany. paleobotany can be a dynamic and contributing science to a working knowledgeof biological systems of the past, present, and possibly the future.
http://www.colby.edu/~ragastal/Paleobot.htm
A Brief Introduction to
PALEOBOTANY
Although most of the "green things" that populate our oceans and continents don't have the ability to move about and, hence, grab out attention, the world's biota couldn't exist without these organisms. The Plant Kingdom is the base of Earth's food chain and, as such, is the foundation for all life as we know it today, in the recent past, and in the deep past. That's not to say that today's biota is exactly like that of the past. Indeed, there have been dramatic changes in the base of the food chain since its first appearance. Documentation of these changes and understanding the reasons for these changes is only part of what Paleobotany - the study of fossil plants sensu latu (in the broad sense) - attempts to do.
Those scientists who actively pursue study of these seemingly "uninteresting" organisms have devised several approaches to examine life's history that can be separated into two broad categories TRADITIONAL and INTEGRATIVE APPROACHES. Traditional approaches follow methodologies established during and immediately after the Renaissance, while Integrative approaches are based upon methodologies that could only be established following advances in technology of the 20 th Century. Advances in analytical techniques in the next several decades will, once again, change the way in which we approach this and other disciplines but, the traditional approaches will remain basic to all avenues of research. If you don't know how it was preserved, what it is, how it is constructed, and what is its life cycle, you can't take the organism(s) and use it with any amount of credibility for more synthetic approaches in our desire to develop local, regional, and global models of how Earth works.

26. Department Of Geological Sciences, U Of M
Evolutionary paleobotany, University of Michigan.
http://www.geo.lsa.umich.edu/dept/faculty/burnham/index.html
Robyn J. Burnham Associate Professor
Ph.D. Botany, University of Washington, 1987 Paleobotany, Paleoecology
Geological Sciences
University of Michigan
2534 C.C. Little Building, 425 E. University Ave.
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1063
Voice: 734-647-2585; Fax: 734-936-1380
Email: rburnham@umich.edu Personal Pages Ruthven Museum Search Sponsored Research Database ( hints Research Interests Dr. Burnham is interested in the evolution of modern tropical ecosystems from the earliest angiosperm-dominated environments of the Mesozoic up to and including complex tropical rainforests of the modern Amazon Basin. Specifically, her research efforts have been directed toward reconstructing ancient forests from the patterns of plant litter preserved in the fossil record. She has determined that under certain conditions, the fossil record can be extremely reliable in its reflection of community and species-level parameters that describe structure and resources of ancient forests. Current research efforts are directed toward the extant and fossil history of vines and lianas and their role in ecosystems over time. Research projects involve: liana distribution and diversity in modern Amazonian Ecuador; Miocene fossil plants from Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru, and Colombia; and plant taphonomy in tropical lowlands of South America.
Selected Publications ournal of Tropical Ecology

27. Paleobotany Laboratory At Weston Observatory
Research at the paleobotany Laboratory at Weston focuses on the evolution of earlyland plants. IOP stands for the International Organization of paleobotany.
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/wesobs/PalyLab.html
Research at the Paleobotany Laboratory at Weston focuses on the evolution of early land plants. We are particularly interested in the fossil evidence surrounding the origin of terrestrial plants, the bulk of this evidence comes from the study of cryptospores, spore-like palynomorphs that pre-date the occurrence of macroscopic land plants. Research projects involve cryptospores, acritarchs, spores and pollen, and early land plant problematica, such as the Nematophytales. Other ancillary technical projects associated with palynological study include computer application development for the study of spore shape and digital Infrared microscopy.
Research Projects
Recent News Personnel
Research Projects
The Arisaig Project
Silurian Palynology of the central Applachians
This project involves field and laboratory studies of Silurian spores and algal cysts from mostly middle and upper Silurian units in Pennsylvania to Virginia. We are examining spores of the early land plants and creating a record of their remains for the first time from these shallow shelf to near shore environments. The results compare favorably with other sections described from the Welsh Basin, Prague Basin and Avalonia. It was during the middle to upper Silurian interval that the tracheophytes (vascular plants) most probably evolved. Through the study and classification of spore remains, we are able to document the origin and early diversification of this important evolutionary event which lead to the establishment of life in the subaerial terrestrial surface. The project was sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Click to view

28. AASP Portal For Palynology
paleobotany. North American Plant Macrofossil Database. The PaleobotanicalSection of the Botanical Society of America. The index
http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/associations/aasp/portal/paleo.html
Palynology Portal main page. update 18 August 2001.
Paleobotany

29. Paleo Life
Paleontology, paleobotany, and pollen analysis links.
http://life.csu.edu.au/paleo.html
Paleo Life
This service has been discontinued.
We apologise for any inconvenience.

30. Sunrae.uel.ac.uk/palaeo/
Similar pages Open Directory Science Biology Botany paleobotany Hans' paleobotany Pages - Website on fossil plants. Internet Directoryfor Botany - Alphabetical list of links pertaining to paleobotany.
http://sunrae.uel.ac.uk/palaeo/

31. Internet Directory For Botany
Alphabetical list of links pertaining to paleobotany.
http://www.helsinki.fi/kmus/botpale.html
The Internet Directory for Botany - Subject Category List and the Helsinki mirror site of the Internet Directory for Botany - Alphabetical List have been closed. The main page of the Internet Directory for Botany in Canada is still accessible.

32. Internet Directory For Botany: Paleobotany, Palynology, Pollen
INTERNET DIRECTORY FOR BOTANY paleobotany, PALYNOLOGY, POLLEN. A ComputerAssistedAnnotated Bibliography and Preliminary Survey of Nevada paleobotany.
http://www.botany.net/IDB/subject/botpale.html
INTERNET DIRECTORY FOR BOTANY: PALEOBOTANY, PALYNOLOGY, POLLEN
Original location of this page: http://www.helsinki.fi/kmus/botpale.html

33. Paleobotany
28, Monday, November 5, 2001. 130 PM530 PM, Hynes Convention Center 112. paleobotany.Howard J. Falcon-Lang and Martin B. Farley, Presiding. Paper , Start Time,
http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2001AM/finalprogram/session_1117.htm
Session No. 28 Monday, November 5, 2001 1:30 PM-5:30 PM, Hynes Convention Center: 112 Paleobotany Howard J. Falcon-Lang and Martin B. Farley, Presiding Paper # Start Time 1:30 PM LATE CARBONIFEROUS PLANT ECOLOGY ACROSS AN ALLUVIAL PLAIN TO COASTAL PLAIN TRANSECT, JOGGINS, NOVA SCOTIA : FALCON-LANG, Howard J., Earth Sciences, Dalhousie Univ, Halifax, NS B3H 3J5 Canada, hfalconl@is.dal.ca. 1:45 PM WARM INTERVAL BEFORE THE BEGINNING OF THE CARBONIFEROUS ICE AGE INDICATED BY PLANT FOSSILS FROM THE LATE EARLY CARBONIFEROUS OF GONDWANA : PFEFFERKORN, Hermann W., Univ Pennsylvania, 240 S 33rd St, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6316, hpfeffer@sas.upenn.edu and IANNUZZI, Roberto, Departamento de Paleontologia e Estratigrafia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Av. Bento Gonçalves, 9500, Porto Alegre, RS, 91.509-900, Brazil 2:00 PM RECOGNITION OF A NEW ANGARAN-TYPE FLORA AND FACIES VARIATION IN THE LATE PALEOZOIC MT. DALL CONGLOMERATE, FAREWELL TERRANE, ALASKA : SUNDERLIN, David, Department of Geophysical Sciences, Univ of Chicago, 5734 S. Ellis Ave, Chicago, IL 60637, dfsunder@uchicago.edu. 2:15 PM PATTERNS OF MORPHOLOGICAL EVOLUTION IN THE LEAVES OF FERNS AND SEED PLANTS : BOYCE, Charles Kevin, Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard Univ, 26 Oxford St, Cambridge, MA 02138, cboyce@oeb.harvard.edu.

34. Paleobotany And Palynology
Paleobotanical and palynological holdings of the museum. Site contains type collection information, publications data and image gallery.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/paleobotany/paleobotany.htm#Top
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.

35. Paleontology/Paleobotany
Session No. 27, Tuesday, March 13, 2001. 130 PM315 PM, Sheraton Burlington DiamondSalon II. Paleontology/paleobotany. Robert A. Gastaldo, Presiding. Start Time.
http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2001NE/finalprogram/session_375.htm
Session No. 27 Tuesday, March 13, 2001 1:30 PM-3:15 PM, Sheraton Burlington: Diamond Salon II Paleontology/Paleobotany Robert A. Gastaldo, Presiding Start Time 1:30 PM LANDSCAPE PALEOECOLOGY AND LATE QUATERNARY EXTINCTIONS IN THE HUDSON VALLEY : ROBINSON, Guy, BURNEY, David A., and BURNEY, Lida Pigott, Biological Sciences, Fordham University, 441 E Fordham Road, Bronx, NY 10458, grobinson@fordham.edu 1:50 PM FOSSILIZATION OF TERTIARY INSECTS AND PLANTS BY POLYSACCHARIDE FILM : O'BRIEN, Neal R. , ROSS, Angelena M. , MEYER, Herbert W. , REILLY, Kimberly , and MAGUIRE, Stacey , (1) Geology Department, State Univ of New York College at Potsdam, Potsdam, NY 13676, hollow79@yahoo.com, (2) Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument, PO Box 185, Florissant, CO 80816-0185, (3) Franklin Academy, Malone, NY 12953 2:10 PM EARLY MIDDLE DEVONIAN TERRESTRIAL ECOSYTEMS OF MAINE: THE TROUT VALLEY FORMATION REVISITED : GASTALDO, Robert A., NELSON, Robert E., BANDOW, Sarah C., LINDLEY, Carolyn F., and TROUT, Melissa K., Geology, Colby College, 5800 Mayflower Hill, Waterville, ME 04901-8858, ragastal@colby.edu 2:30 PM LITHOFACIES CONTROL ON BIODIVERSITY AT LOCAL AND REGIONAL SCALES IN THE MIDDLE DEVONIAN (GIVETIAN) UPPER HAMILTON GROUP OF NEW YORK STATE : BEZUSKO, Karen M., University of Cincinnati, 500 Geology/Physics, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0013, bezuskk@email.uc.edu and MILLER, Arnold I., Department of Geology, Univ of Cincinnati, 500 Geology Physics, Cincinnati, OH 45220

36. Paleobotany
paleobotany. paleobotany is the study of the geologic history ofthe plant kingdom. It is properly a major branch of paleontology
http://www.geocities.com/jdhosu/paleo/paleobotany.html

37. Paleontology & Paleobotany
Paleontology paleobotany. Back Home. paleobotany. INTRODUCTION TOICHNOLOGY; The Amber Webpage; Fossil Preparation and Conservation;
http://www.geocities.com/geoseek/paleo.htm
Back Home
Paleobotany
Paleontology

38. Paleobotany
WebStat hit counter. paleobotany. Angiosperm Evolution. Turonian (Late Cretaceous- 90 million years old) Aralia-like leaf from the clay pits at Sayreville, NJ.
http://www.monmouth.com/~bcornet/paleobot.htm
RETURN Plant Evolution: The origin of Flowering Plants Cretaceous leaf fossil NEW Gnetales and Angiosperms are not related Pre-1998 concept of the relationship between angiosperms and the Gnetales: Acceptance versus non-acceptance by mainstream science is as much a function of beliefs and prejudice as it is a derivative of the evidence Evolutionary radiation of the Angiospermae from Early to Late Cretaceous Progressive increase in level of leaf evolution during the Primary Radiation of angiosperms in the Cretaceous. Prejudice and belief battle it out with scientific logic Early Cretaceous angiosperm pollen. a-d: Clavatipollenites e-f: Retimonocolpites g-h: Liliacidites i-j: Stellatopollis k-l: Liliacidites m-n: Retimonocolpites o-p: Tricolpites q-r: Retimonocolpites compare: Monocrinopollis mulleri Late Triassic pollen that is almost indistinguishable from Early Cretaceous angiosperm pollen. Late Triassic Crinopolles pollen. Pentacrinopollis traversii Tricrinopollis olsenii Richmond basin, VA. Postulated direction of palynological evolution within the Crinopolles Group. a: Pentacrinopollis gemmatus b: Pentacrinopollis traversii c: hypothetical pentasulcate intermediate d-h: Tricrinopollis spp.

39. Paleobotany
N A T U R A L H I S T O R Y M U S E U M S A N D R E S E A R C H C EN T E R S. Email Museums@NatureQuest.net. P A L E O B O T A N Y.
http://www.academiaexchange.net/1.Science_Exchange/Nature_Expos/Collection/Paleo
N A T U R A L H I S T O R Y M U S E U M S A N D R E S E A R C H C E N T E R S E mail: Museums NatureQuest net
P A L E O B O T A N Y Strength In This Field Collection:
More Info:
Where:
Museums of Natural History

Copenhagen
(Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen)
Denmark The Collection of Invertebrate and Plant Type Palaeontological Collection - The Type Collection , is a depository of scientifically described and figured fossil invertebrates and plant specimens from Denmark and Greenland. About 22,000 specimens are registrated in the Type Collection which includes rich invertebrate collections of fossils from the Danish Cretaceous, Tertiary and Quaternary deposits, and many specimens from the Mesozoic and Palaeozoic exposures on Bornholm, together with well preserved specimens of cephalopods, plant fossils and rich Palaeozoic material from Greenland. Museon
Hague
The Netherlands Geology The Museon has some exquisite petrified wood exhibits in all colours of the rainbow.

40. Paleobotany
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http://www.xsnrg.com/paleobotany/

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