Greenwood, D.R., 1992. Taphonomic constraints on foliar physiognomic interpretations of Late Cretaceous and Tertiary paleoclimates. Rev. Palaeobot. Palynol. 7 l: 149-190. Foliar physiognomic interpretations of Late Cretaceous and Tertiary palaeoclimates, such as those derived from Leaf Margin Analysis, usually rely on taxon-based observations from the forest canopy. In these analyses, Southern Hemisphere rainforests are sometimes considered analogues of North American Late Cretaceous vegetation. Past analyses have not considered taphonomic biases. Taphonomic influences on specimen-based and taxon-based approaches to foliar physiognomic analyses of palaeoclimate are assessed here using forest-floor and stream-bed leaf litter from modern Aust...
Plants are sensitive indicators of climate and environment. In particular, the size and shape (physi...
AbstractIn the past the problems and advantages of the nearest-living-relative (NLR) and leaf physio...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88039/1/j.1469-8137.2011.03725.x.pd
Palaeoclimate estimates derived from plant-based proxies are potentially subject to uncertainties ar...
An understanding of the taphonomic processes that form and possibly bias plant fossil assemblages is...
Although there is a broad knowledge of Cretaceous climate on a global scale, quantitative climate es...
There are several methods of predicting terrestrial palaeoclimates from the size and shape of fossil...
CLAMP (Climate Leaf Analysis Multivariate Program) is a powerful paleoclimate proxy with the ability...
Present-day correlations between leaf physiognomic traits (shape and size) and climate are widely us...
ABSTRACT.—Leaf physiognomy (size and shape) in fossils is commonly used to reconstruct terrestrial p...
This item is only available electronically.The ability to identify forest architecture in the geolog...
One method to determine past climate has been the use of leaf morphological characteristics of fossi...
16 páginas, 2 tablas, 5 figuras.Paleobotanists have long used models based on leaf size and shape to...
Measurements of surface uplift rate potentially hold the key to understanding the tectonics of mount...
Early Palaeocene floras from twenty seven sites within the Raton, southern Powder River and south-we...
Plants are sensitive indicators of climate and environment. In particular, the size and shape (physi...
AbstractIn the past the problems and advantages of the nearest-living-relative (NLR) and leaf physio...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88039/1/j.1469-8137.2011.03725.x.pd
Palaeoclimate estimates derived from plant-based proxies are potentially subject to uncertainties ar...
An understanding of the taphonomic processes that form and possibly bias plant fossil assemblages is...
Although there is a broad knowledge of Cretaceous climate on a global scale, quantitative climate es...
There are several methods of predicting terrestrial palaeoclimates from the size and shape of fossil...
CLAMP (Climate Leaf Analysis Multivariate Program) is a powerful paleoclimate proxy with the ability...
Present-day correlations between leaf physiognomic traits (shape and size) and climate are widely us...
ABSTRACT.—Leaf physiognomy (size and shape) in fossils is commonly used to reconstruct terrestrial p...
This item is only available electronically.The ability to identify forest architecture in the geolog...
One method to determine past climate has been the use of leaf morphological characteristics of fossi...
16 páginas, 2 tablas, 5 figuras.Paleobotanists have long used models based on leaf size and shape to...
Measurements of surface uplift rate potentially hold the key to understanding the tectonics of mount...
Early Palaeocene floras from twenty seven sites within the Raton, southern Powder River and south-we...
Plants are sensitive indicators of climate and environment. In particular, the size and shape (physi...
AbstractIn the past the problems and advantages of the nearest-living-relative (NLR) and leaf physio...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/88039/1/j.1469-8137.2011.03725.x.pd