paleobotanik
Paleobotanik (commonly known in English as paleobotany) is the scientific study of fossil plants and plant remains from geologic past. It examines preserved plant structures such as leaves, seeds, wood, pollen, spores and microscopic silica bodies to reconstruct plant evolution, ancient ecosystems and past climates. The field bridges botany and paleontology, integrating morphological description, stratigraphy and geochronology.
Techniques used in paleobotanik include macroscopic study of impressions and permineralized specimens, microscopic analysis of pollen
Research in paleobotanik contributes to understanding major evolutionary events (for example the colonization of land by
The discipline has historical roots in 19th-century naturalists who first described fossil floras. Today paleobotanik is