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  2. Fossil history of flowering plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_history_of...

    The fossil history of flowering plants records the development of flowers and other distinctive structures of the angiosperms, now the dominant group of plants on land.The history is controversial as flowering plants appear in great diversity in the Cretaceous, with scanty and debatable records before that, creating a puzzle for evolutionary biologists that Charles Darwin named an "abominable ...

  3. List of plants with symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_with_symbolism

    Various folk cultures and traditions assign symbolic meanings to plants. Although these are no longer commonly understood by populations that are increasingly divorced from their rural traditions, some meanings survive. In addition, these meanings are alluded to in older pictures, songs and writings.

  4. Colpophyllia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colpophyllia

    Boulder brain corals inhabit coral reefs in the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico, with most occurrences off the coasts of Belize, eastern Yucatán Peninsula, southern Florida, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and Cuba. It is identifiable in fossil records at least since the early Pliocene.

  5. Chrysanthemum stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysanthemum_stone

    As Hunan's golden card, chrysanthemum stone carving technology came into being in 1740 and had a history of 270 years. Because chrysanthemum stone belongs to non-renewable resources, and only one place in Liuyang belongs to the concentrated origin in the world, it has the title of "the first stone in the world".

  6. Chrysanthemum × morifolium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysanthemum_×_morifolium

    The plant is 30–90 centimetres (12–35 in) high and wide, which grows as a perennial herbaceous or slightly woody plant on the ground. The stems stand upright. The stems stand upright. The leaves are broad ovate in outline and wedge-shaped in the petiole, the length of the leaves is more than 150 mm (6 in).

  7. Petoskey stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petoskey_stone

    A Petoskey stone is a rock and a fossil, often pebble-shaped, that is composed of a fossilized rugose coral, Hexagonaria percarinata. [1] Such stones were formed as a result of glaciation, in which sheets of ice plucked stones from the bedrock, grinding off their rough edges and depositing them in the northwestern (and some in the northeastern) portion of Michigan's lower peninsula.

  8. Florissant Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florissant_Formation

    Fossil plants, and in particular their leaves, have been the most useful sources of information of paleoclimate during the time of deposition of the Florissant Formation. Plants have a smaller tolerance on average to climatic changes, whereas many animals can be mobile and respond to rapid seasonal or daily changes.

  9. Rugosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rugosa

    "Tetracorallia" from Ernst Haeckel's Kunstformen der Natur, 1904 Cross-section of Stereolasma rectum, a rugose coral from the Middle Devonian of Erie County, New York. The Rugosa, also called the Tetracorallia, rugose corals, or horn corals, are an extinct order of solitary and colonial corals that were abundant in Middle Ordovician to Late Permian seas.