Taylor, Edith L.
Taylor, Edith L., 1951-....
Edith L. Taylor
VIAF ID: 17337994 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/17337994
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Edith L. Taylor
- 200 _ | ‡a Taylor ‡b Edith L. ‡f 1951-....
-
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, Edith L. (sparse)
-
-
-
- 100 1 0 ‡a Taylor, Edith L.
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, Edith L. ‡d 1951-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, Edith L. ‡d 1951-...
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Taylor, Edith L., ‡d 1951-....
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (8)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
(2151) Proposal to conserve the name Marattiopsis (fossil Marattiaceae) with a conserved type | |
Additional evidence for the Mesozoic diversification of conifers: Pollen cone of Chimaerostrobus minutus gen. et sp. nov. (Coniferales), from the Lower Jurassic of Antarctica | |
Alluvial and volcanic pathways to silicified plant stems (Upper Carboniferous–Triassic) and their taphonomic and palaeoenvironmental meaning | |
Antarctic glossopterid diversity on a local scale: the presence of multiple megasporophyll genera, Upper Permian, Mt. Achernar, Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica | |
Antarctic paleobiology : its role in the reconstruction of Gondwana | |
Arbuscular mycorrhizal‐like fungi in Carboniferous arborescent lycopsids | |
Ashicaulis woolfei n. sp.: additional evidence for the antiquity of osmundaceous ferns from the Triassic of Antarctica | |
The biology and evolution of fossil plants, c1993: | |
Cataphylls of the Middle Triassic cycad Antarcticycas schopfii and new insights into cycad evolution | |
Chytridiomycota | |
Development and ecological implications of dormant buds in the high‐Paleolaltitude Triassic sphenophyte Spaciinodum (Equisetaceae) | |
The distribution and interactions of some Paleozoic fungi | |
Dordrechtites arcanus sp. nov., an Anatomically Preserved Gymnospermous Reproductive Structure from the Middle Triassic of Antarctica | |
Early Devonian (~410 mya) microfossils resembling Characiopsis (Tribophyceae) and Characium (Chlorophyceae). | |
The enigmatic Devonian fossil Prototaxites is not a rolled‐up liverwort mat: Comment on the paper by Graham et al. (AJB 97: 268–275) | |
The Enigmatic Paleozoic plants Spermopteris and Phasmatocycas reconsidered | |
Filamentous cyanobacteria preserved in masses of fungal hyphae from the Triassic of Antarctica | |
The First Permineralized Microsporophyll of the Glossopteridales: Eretmonia macloughlinii sp. nov | |
Fossil fungi | |
Fungi and fungal interactions in the Rhynie chert: a review of the evidence, with the description of Perexiflasca tayloriana gen. et sp. nov.†. | |
Fungi in a Psaronius root mantle from the Rotliegend (Asselian, Lower Permian/Cisuralian) of Thuringia, Germany | |
Habit and Ecology of the Petriellales, an Unusual Group of Seed Plants from the Triassic of Gondwana | |
Hagenococcus aggregatus nov. gen. et sp., a microscopic, colony-forming alga from the 410-million-yr-old Rhynie chert | |
Hapsidoxylon terpsichorum gen. et sp. nov., a stem with unusual anatomy from the Triassic of Antarctica | |
The Limitations of Molecular Systematics: A Palaeobotanical Perspective | |
Morphological and functional stasis in mycorrhizal root nodules as exhibited by a Triassic conifer | |
The "New Approach to Corystospermales" and the Antarctic Fossil Record: A Critique | |
A new Pennsylvanian pollen organ from northwestern Missouri with affinities in the Lyginopteridales | |
Organization, anatomy, and fungal endophytes of a Triassic conifer embryo | |
Paleomycology of the Princeton Chert II. Dark-septate fungi in the aquatic angiosperm Eorhiza arnoldii indicate a diverse assemblage of root-colonizing fungi during the Eocene | |
Preface | |
Protoascon missouriensis, a complex fossil microfungus revisited | |
A reappraisal ofNeocalamites and Schizoneura(fossil Equisetales) based on material from the Triassic of East Antarctica | |
Root suckering in a Triassic conifer from Antarctica: paleoecological and evolutionary implications | |
Secondary phloem anatomy of Cycadeoidea (Bennettitales). | |
Seed ferns from the late Paleozoic and Mesozoic: Any angiosperm ancestors lurking there? | |
Tree growth at polar latitudes based on fossil tree ring analysis | |
Triassic leech cocoon from Antarctica contains fossil bell animal | |
Under pressure? Epicormic shoots and traumatic growth zones in high-latitude Triassic trees from East Antarctica. | |
মুখবন্ধ |