Journal: Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology
Loading...
Abbreviation
Rev. palaeobot. palynol.
Publisher
Elsevier
9 results
Search Results
Publications1 - 9 of 9
- New records of Early Cretaceous angiosperm pollen from Portuguese coastal depositsItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyHeimhofer, Ulrich; Hochuli, Peter A.; Burla, Stefan; et al. (2007) - Palynological zonation and particulate organic matter of the Middle Triassic of the Southern Alps (Seceda and Val Gola–Margon sections, Northern Italy)Item type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyHochuli, Peter A.; Roghi, Guido; Brack, Peter (2015) - Amorphous organic matterItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyPacton, Muriel; Gorin, Georges E.; Vasconcelos, Crisogono (2011) - Palynofacies and geochemical analysis of Oligo-Miocene bituminous rocks from the Moldavidian Domain (Eastern Carpathians, Romania): Implications for petroleum explorationItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyŢabǎrǎ, Daniel; Pacton, Muriel; Makou, Matthew C.; et al. (2015) - Vegetational composition of the Early Cretaceous Chicalhão flora (Lusitanian Basin, western Portugal) based on palynological and mesofossil assemblagesItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyMendes, Mário Miguel; Dinis, Jorge; Pais, João; et al. (2014) - Pollen from Late Pleistocene hyena (Crocuta crocuta spelaea) coprolites: An interdisciplinary approach from two Italian sitesItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyGatta, Maurizio; Sinopoli, Gaia; Giardini, Marco; et al. (2016) - An Early Triassic Pleuromeia strobilus from Nevada, USAItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyMendelin, Morris; Schneebeli-Hermann, Elke; Kustatscher, Evelyn; et al. (2022)A lycopsid reproductive organ from the Koipato Group in the southern Humboldt Range, Nevada, is described. It was found in fine-grained volcanogenic turbitides of mid-Spathian age derived from the Koipato volcanic arc. The strobilus is preserved as an imprint with small amounts of organic material. The shape of the reproductive organ, as well as the sporophylls, resemble those of the genus Pleuromeia, especially Pleuromeia sternbergii. Immature spores extracted from the organic matter are partly covered by authigenic muscovite crystals. This is the first record of this iconic taxon in the Early Triassic of North America. It further strengthens the global distribution of this genus during the Early Triassic by filling up a major paleogeographic gap. - Artificial neural networks as potential classification tools for dinoflagellate cyst imagesItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyWeller, Andrew F.; Harris, Anthony J.; Ware, J. Andrew (2006) - The challenge of inferring palaeoclimates from extant plant distributionsItem type: Journal Article
Review of Palaeobotany and PalynologyGhazoul, Jaboury (2012)
Publications1 - 9 of 9