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The earliest vascular land plants appeared about 425 million years ago in the late Early Silurian. This form, Cooksonia, consisted of small naked, dichotomously bifurcting axes bearing terminal sporangia. These plants were only a few centimeters high. Baragwanathia is a much more robust plant consisting of up to 30 cm long axes with spirally arranged leaves and it has been described from the Upper Silurian of Australia; unfortunately, the quality of the compressions is rather poor and no organic material is preserved.
The Early Devonian is characterized by a very strong radiation of land plants. Four major groups can be distinguished: the Rhyniophytes, the Zosterophyllophytes, the Lycopods and the Trimerophytes. The Rhyniophytes are definitely among the best known land plants. These ca. 15-20 cm high plants consist of naked, dichotomously branching axes terminally bearing fusiform sporangia. Rhyniophytes lacked true roots but had single-celled rhizoids for taking up water and nutrients. The silicified material from the Rhynie chert shows many anatomical details. The equally sized Zosterophyllophytes are characterized by having dichotomously branching axes bearing laterally inserted sporangia; sporangia may be standing in strobili. Some Zosterophylls had small spine-like enations. The Trimerophytes have a more complex vascular system and terminally positioned sporangia standing in dense clusters. Some trimerophytes had monopodial main axes; however, lateral axes still had dichotomous branching. Some Trimerophytes could reach a considerable height; Pertica from the late Early Devionan may already have attained a height of ca. 3 metres. The Zosterophyllophytes are considered to be the ancestral group that gave rise to the Lycopods, whereas all other groups of land plants are regarded to have been evolved from the Trimerophytes. The exquisit preservation of the Rhynie chert material enabled the recognition of the gametophyte stages of some of the earliest land plants. Gametophytes have also been recognized in compression preservation.
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The oldest land plants 1 | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages |
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The oldest land plants 2 | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages |
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Pre-Devonian vascular land plants: Baragwanathia and Cooksonia | ||||
Baragwanathia is a putatitive early lcopod from the Silurian of southern Australia. The age of these fossils was long controversial, but now it is agreed that they are Silurian. | ||||
Baragwanathia | R.A. Spicer, The Open University, Milton Keynes |
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Baragwanathia | Kathleen Pigg's "Plant Fossils and Evolution" |
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Baragwanathia | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Cooksonia | ||||
Cooksonia hemisphaerica | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Cooksonia | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Cooksonia pertonii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages |
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Cooksonia pertonii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages |
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One of the most famous Early Devonian land plant localities is Rhynie in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. The Rhynie Chert is one of the most important fossil plant occurrences because it represents the oldest and most completely preserved terrestrial ecosystem. The Rhynie Chert has been radiometrically dated at 396 Ma (Pragian). Plants remains show excellent cellular preservation. Three groups of plants are represented: the Rhyniophytes, the Zosterphyllophytes and a lycopod. Although plants are preserved in great detail natural affinities of the taxa are not always clear. | ||||
Rhynie Chert | Paläobotanik Münster |
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Rhynie Chert | Rhynie Chert Reserach Group, Aberdeen | The site of our friends in Aberdeen |
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Rhynie Chert | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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The Rhyniophytes are a group of early land plants originally described from the Rhynie Chert. They have naked, dichotomously branching axes with terminally positioned sporangia. The systematic position of Aglaophyton, Horneophyton and Nothia is not clear, because of differences in the vascular system respectively sporangium morphology; the latter form also shows resemblances with Zosterophyllophytes. Some authors classify these taxa in separate groups. Several forms have been interpreted as compression counterparts of the Rhyniophytes; however, this needs further clearification. | ||||
Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | ||||
Landscape at Rhynie, Rhynia | R.A. Spicer, The Open University, Milton Keynes |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Reconstruction and overview |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Cross sections |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Epidermis and stoma |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Hemispherical projection on axis |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Decaying axes |
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Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii | Paläobotanik Münster |
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Aglaophyton major | ||||
Aglaophyton major | Paläobotanik Münster | germinating spore and young gametophyte |
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Aglaophyton major | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Aglaophyton major | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Reconstruction and overviews |
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Aglaophyton major | Paläobotanik Münster |
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Aglaophyton major | Paläobotanik Münster | Stoma |
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Rhynie Chert | Kathleen Pigg's "Plant Fossils and Evolution" |
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Horneophyton lignieri | ||||
Horneophyton lignieri | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory | Sporangia |
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Horneophyton lignieri | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Overview, conducting strand with spores |
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Horneophyton lignieri | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Rhizomes with rhizoids |
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Horneophyton lignieri | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Sporangium |
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Horneophyton lignieri | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Spores |
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Nothia | ||||
Nothia aphylla | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Reconstruction and overview |
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The Zosterophyllophytes are a group of Early to Middle Devonian plants with mostly dicotomously branching axes and laterally inserted, usually more or less kidney-shaped sporangia. Several Zosterphylls have naked axes, others have small spine-like enations. Very typical are H-shaped branching patterns and coiled axis apices. Most forms are known as compressions, however also anatomically preserved material is known. | ||||
Zosterophylls | Univ. California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley |
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Crenaticaulis | ||||
Crenaticaulis | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Sawdonia | ||||
Sawdonia acanthotheca | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Sawdonia ornata | R.A. Spicer, The Open University, Milton Keynes |
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Sawdonia | Kathleen Pigg's "Plant Fossils and Evolution" |
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Serrulacaulis | ||||
Serrulacaulis furcatus | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Rebuchia | ||||
Rebuchia ovata | Smithsonian, Washington DC |
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Zosterophyllum | ||||
Zosterophyllum divaricatum | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Zosterophyllum rhenanum | Institut für Spezielle Botanik, Jena | Alternation of generations |
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The Trimerophytes are a group Early and Middle Devonian plants with either dichotomously branching axes, or with a monopodial main axes. The Trimerophytes were certainly the most robust plants occurring during the Early Devonian. | ||||
Trimerophytes TD> | Univ. California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley |
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Psilophyton | ||||
Psilophyton crenulatum | R.A. Spicer, The Open University, Milton Keynes | Fertile axes |
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Psilophyton crenulatum | Kathleen Pigg's "Plant Fossils and Evolution" |
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Psilophyton dawsonii | Kathleen Pigg's "Plant Fossils and Evolution". | Anatomically preserved axis |
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Psilophyton dapsile | Kathleen Pigg's "Plant Fossils and Evolution" |
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Psilophyton ornata | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Psilophyton | Univ. California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley |
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Pertica | ||||
Pertica quadrifaria | Maine Department of Conservation | State fossil of Maine |
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Pertica | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Early Lycopodiophytes | ||||
Asteroxylon | ||||
Asteroxylon | Virtual Paleobotany Laboratory |
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Asteroxylon mackiei | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Reconstruction and overview |
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Asteroxylon mackiei | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Star-shaped xylem |
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Asteroxylon mackiei | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Tracheids |
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Asteroxylon mackiei | Hans Steur's Paleobotany Pages | Leaves |
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= excellent ! | = very good |
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The last check of the list of links was done on 25 October
1999. The links give the most direct connections to pictures available
on the web; in many cases they are from sites that have additional
palaeobotanical
information. The above ratings refer to:
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© Forschungsstelle für Paläobotanik, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster |
October 1999
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