Definition of Paleobotanists

1. Noun. (plural of paleobotanist) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Paleobotanists

1. paleobotanist [n] - See also: paleobotanist

Lexicographical Neighbors of Paleobotanists

paleobiogeographer
paleobiogeographers
paleobiogeographic
paleobiogeographical
paleobiogeography
paleobiologic
paleobiological
paleobiologies
paleobiologist
paleobiologists
paleobiology
paleobotanic
paleobotanical
paleobotanies
paleobotanist
paleobotanists (current term)
paleobotany
paleocarida
paleoceanographer
paleoceanographers
paleoceanographic
paleoceanography
paleocerebellum
paleochannel
paleochannels
paleochristian
paleoclimate
paleoclimates
paleoclimatic

Literary usage of Paleobotanists

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Revision of Fossil Sequoia and Taxodium in Western North America Based on by Ralph W. Chaney (2008)
"First recognition of fossils representing these latter genera came to European paleobotanists at a time when the living trees in distant North America were ..."

2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1901)
"It is at least a fact of more than passing interest that the two earliest among the great paleobotanists of this continent— Dawson and ..."

3. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1919)
"And some paleobotanists even regard the group as a phylum, or primary division, and not as a class; and to this phylum they then apply the name ..."

4. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1914)
"paleobotanists have long maintained that the existing climate is essentially ... While the older paleobotanists were inclined to overestimate the conditions ..."

5. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington by Biological Society of Washington (1882)
"Again, it has been shown by experienced geologists that in Australia there are beds which bear a flora that paleobotanists declare to be typically Jurassic, ..."

6. The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (1911)
"This feature could be overlooked if the work were designed merely for working paleobotanists, but for botanists and, to a much greater degree, ..."

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