References

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Smith, S. Y., Rothwell, G. W. & Stockey, R. A. (2003): Cyathea cranhamii sp. nov. (Cyatheaceae), anatomically preserved tree fern sori from the Lower Cretaceous of Vancouver Island, British Columbia. – American Journal of Botany 90(5): 755–760.

Friis, E. M., Pedersen, K. R. & Schönenberger, J. (2003): Endressianthus, a new Normapolles‐producing plant genus of Fagalean affinity from the Late Cretaceous of Portugal. – International Journal of Plant Sciences 164(5 suppl.): S201–S223.

Yamada, T. & Kato, M. (2002): Regnellites nagashimae gen. et sp. nov., the oldest macrofossil of Marsileaceae, from the Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous of western Japan. – International Journal of Plant Sciences 163(5): 715–723.

Rothwell, G. W. & Stockey, R. A. (2002): Anatomically preserved Cycadeoidea (Cycadeoidaceae), with a reevaluation of systematic characters for the seed cones of Bennettitales. – American Journal of Botany 89(9): 1447–1458.

Agarwal, A. & Ambwani, K. (2002): Amberiwadiacarpon devgarhensis gen. et sp. nov. from Amberiwadi, Sindhudurg District, Maharashtra, India. – The Palaeobotanist 51(1–3): 107–111.

Schönenberger, J., Pedersen, K. R. & Friis, E. M. (2001): Normapolles flowers of fagalean affinity from the Late Cretaceous of Portugal. – Plant Systematics and Evolution 226: 205–230.

Schönenberger, J., Friis, E. M., Matthews, M. L. & Endress, P. K. (2001): Cunoniaceae in the Cretaceous of Europe: Evidence from fossil flowers. – Annals of Botany 88(3): 423–437.

Schönenberger, J. & Friis, E. M. (2001): Fossil flowers of ericalean affinity from the Late Cretaceous of Southern Sweden. – American Journal of Botany 88(3): 467–480.

Kvaček, Z., Manchester, S. R. & Guo, S. (2001): Trifoliolate leaves of Platanus bella (Heer) comb. n. from the Paleocene of North America, Greenland, and Asia and their relationships among extinct and extant Palatanaceae. – International Journal of Plant Sciences 162(2): 441–458.

Herbst, R., Troncoso, A. & Gnaedinger, S. C. (2001): Rochipteris nov. gen., hojas incertae sedis (= Chiropteris pro parte) del Triásico Superior de Argentina y Chile. – Ameghiniana 38(3): 257–269.

Poole, I. & Cantrill, D. J. (2001): Fossil Woods From Williams Point Beds, Livingston Island, Antarctica: A Late Cretaceous Southern High Latitude Flora. – Palaeontology 44(6): 1081–1112.

Axsmith, B. J., Taylor, E. L., Taylor, T. N. & Cúneo, N. R. (2000): New perspectives on the Mesozoic seed fern order Corystospermales based on attached organs from the Triassic of Antarctica. – American Journal of Botany 87(6): 757–768.

Glasspool, I. (2000): Megaspores from the Late Permian, Lower Whybrow coal seam, Sydney Basin, Australia. – Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 110(3–4): 209–227.

Bonde, S. D. (2000): Rhodospathodendron tomlinsonii gen. et sp. nov., an araceous viny axis from the Nawargaon intertrappean beds of India. – The Palaeobotanist 49(1): 85–92.

Kvaček, J. (2000): Frenelopsis alata and its microsporangiate and ovuliferous reproductive structures from the Cenomanian of Bohemia (Czech Republic, Central Europe). – Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 112: 51–78.

Manchester, S. R., Crane, P. R. & Golovneva, L. B. (1999): An extinct genus with affinities to extant Davidia and Camptotheca (Cornales) from the Paleocene of North America and Eastern Asia. – International Journal of Plant Sciences 160(1): 188–207.

Frumin, S. I. & Friis, E. M. (1999): Magnoliid reproductive organs from the Cenomanian-Turonian of north-western Kazakhstan: Magnoliaceae and Illiciaceae. – Plant Systematics and Evolution 216(3–4): 265–288.

Wang, Y. & Wu, X. (1999): Oligocarpia kepingensis sp. nov. frm the Lower Permian of the northern Tarim basin, Xinjiang and its in situ spores. – Chinese science bulletin 44(2): 108–111.

Mai, D. H. (1999): Beiträge zur Kenntnis einiger Holzgewächse im europäischen Tertiär. – Feddes Repertorium 110(1–2): 37–72.

Terada, K. & Suzuki, M. (1998): Revision of the so-called ‘Reevesia’ fossil woods from the Tertiary in Japan – a proposal of the new genus Wataria (Sterculiaceae). – Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 103(3–4): 235–251.

Total records: 470