Speaker: Sandy Hetherington from the University of Edinburgh
“Plant blindness” is the term used to describe the phenomena where plants often go unnoticed or underappreciated by humans. Plant blindness is observed in many contexts including in the study of palaeontology where plants are often overlooked simply as food for animals rather than as the fundamental underpinnings of all terrestrial ecosystems. A major goal of my research is to promote and communicate the importance of land plant evolution and the vast changes plants have made to the Earth System. In my research I utilise a diversity of techniques, including classic comparative methods, new imaging techniques and molecular approaches such as comparative genomics, to shine a spotlight on the evolution of the hidden half of plants – the rooting systems. Rooting systems are the interface between plants and the terrestrial surface and their evolution has therefore played a key role in driving plant evolution and changes to the Earth system. In this lecture I will deliver a journey about root evolution including new insights from the world famous 407 million-year-old Rhynie chert, the roots that underpinned the iconic Carboniferous coal swamp forests and finally the hidden history of roots written in the genomes of living species.
Further reading
Carboniferous crinoids
By William I. Ausich, Thomas W. Kammer and Georgy V. Mirantsev
[ Ссылка ]
Carboniferous conodont biostratigraphy
By James E. Barrick, Alexander S. Alekseev, Silvia Blanco-Ferrera, Natalia V. Goreva, Keyi Hu, Lance L. Lambert, Tamara I. Nemyrovska, Yuping Qi, Scott M. Ritter and Javier Sanz-López
[ Ссылка ]
Carboniferous isotope stratigraphy
By Jitao Chen, Bo Chen and Isabel P. Montañez
[ Ссылка ]
Early land plant phytodebris
By Charles H. Wellman and Alexander C. Ball
[ Ссылка ]
Multiproxy approaches to investigating palaeoecology and palaeohydrology in the Upper Cretaceous Kaiparowits Formation, USA
By Daigo Yamamura, Celina A. Suarez, Alan L. Titus, Hunter M. Manlove and Thea Jackson
[ Ссылка ]
Microfossil and strontium isotope chronology used to identify the controls of Miocene reefs and related facies in NW Cyprus
By Torin Cannings, Elizabeth M. Balmer, Giovanni Coletti, Ryan B. Ickert, Dick Kroon, Isabella Raffi and Alastair H. F. Robertson
[ Ссылка ]
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