© CSIRO 2005Cupressaceae macrofossils are difficult to identify in older sediments, but the extant southern genera begin their record in the Cretaceous (Athrotaxis) and become more diverse and extensive during the Cenozoic. Several extinct genera of Cupressaceae also occur in Cretaceous and Cenozoic sediments, especially in Australasia, and some Cretaceous fossils appear to be more closely related to extant Northern rather than Southern Hemisphere genera. However, information about the history of the dry forest Cupressaceae is extremely limited due to a lack of fossilisation in such environments. The southern Cupressaceae, past and present, demonstrate an ability to compete effectively with angiosperms and have co-existed with them for ten...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Four species of conifer macrofossils are described from the Late Palaeocene Lake Bungarby sediments...
Seed ferns, dominant elements of the vegetation in many parts of the world from the Triassic to Cret...
Tasmanian fossil sites are rich in Cupressaceae genera and species and yet only three genera (Artrot...
© CSIRO 2001The macrofossil record of the plant family Cunoniaceae in Australia is summarised and re...
Callitris Vent., is the most speciose of the Southern Hemisphere Cupressaceae (conifer) genera, with...
Callitris Vent., is the most speciose of the Southern Hemisphere Cupressaceae (conifer) genera, with...
Callitris Vent., is the most speciose of the Southern Hemisphere Cupressaceae (conifer) genera, with...
Diverse Cenozoic (possibly latest Oligocene to mid–late Miocene) macrofossils from the Lightning Rid...
The three southern conifer families, Araucariaceae, Cupressaceae and Podocarpaceae, have a long hist...
This paper documents Early Oligocene fossilized foliage and ovulate cones from Lea River, Tasmania a...
The macrofossil record of the plant family Cunoniaceae in Australia is summarised and reviewed where...
Most extant genus-level radiations in gymnosperms are of Oligocene age or younger, reflecting widesp...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Four species of conifer macrofossils are described from the Late Palaeocene Lake Bungarby sediments...
Seed ferns, dominant elements of the vegetation in many parts of the world from the Triassic to Cret...
Tasmanian fossil sites are rich in Cupressaceae genera and species and yet only three genera (Artrot...
© CSIRO 2001The macrofossil record of the plant family Cunoniaceae in Australia is summarised and re...
Callitris Vent., is the most speciose of the Southern Hemisphere Cupressaceae (conifer) genera, with...
Callitris Vent., is the most speciose of the Southern Hemisphere Cupressaceae (conifer) genera, with...
Callitris Vent., is the most speciose of the Southern Hemisphere Cupressaceae (conifer) genera, with...
Diverse Cenozoic (possibly latest Oligocene to mid–late Miocene) macrofossils from the Lightning Rid...
The three southern conifer families, Araucariaceae, Cupressaceae and Podocarpaceae, have a long hist...
This paper documents Early Oligocene fossilized foliage and ovulate cones from Lea River, Tasmania a...
The macrofossil record of the plant family Cunoniaceae in Australia is summarised and reviewed where...
Most extant genus-level radiations in gymnosperms are of Oligocene age or younger, reflecting widesp...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Cupressaceae subfamily Callitroideae has been an important exemplar for vicariance biogeography, but...
Four species of conifer macrofossils are described from the Late Palaeocene Lake Bungarby sediments...
Seed ferns, dominant elements of the vegetation in many parts of the world from the Triassic to Cret...