Open Access
Subscription Access
An Extinct Lichen from the Mesozoic of the Rajmahal Hills, Jharkhand, India
The present paper deals with the description of an extinct aggregate lichen as petrifaction in a silicified chert of Nipania in the Rajmahal Hills, Jharkhand, India.
Keywords
Mesozoic, Petrified Complicated Lichen, Rajmahal Hills.
User
Font Size
Information
- BARGHOORN, E.S. AND TAYLER, S.A. 1965. Microorganism from the Gunflint chert Science 147: 568-577.
- HALLBAUER, D.K AND VAN WARMELO, L.T. 1974. Fossilized plants in thucholite from Precambrian rocks of the Witwatersrand, south Africa. Precambrian Research 1: 199-212.
- JURINA, A.L. AND KRASSILO, V.A. 2002. Lichen like fossils from the Givtian of central Kazakhstan-Paleontological Journal 36: 541-547.
- RAWAT, S., UPRETI, D.K. AND SINGH, R.P. 2014. Five new lichen records from India. Geophytology44 (1): 77-88.
- SHARMA, B.D. 2017. A glance at the history of researches on Indian pteridophytes and observations on some recent reports. Indian fern Journal 34: 12-22.
- SHARMA, B.D., BOHRA, D.R. AND SUTHAR, O.P. 2001. Some interesting plant fossils from the Mesozoic rocks at the Rajmahal Hills, India. Palaeobotanist 50(2): 207-212.
- SHARMA, B.D. BOHRA, D.R., SUTHAR, O.P. AND HARSH, R. 2015. Some permineralized plant fossils from the early Cretaceous sediments of Rajmahal Hills, Jharkhand, India. Geophytology 45: 41-46
- TAYLOR, T.N., HASS, H. AND KERP, H. 1997. A cyanolichen from the lower Devonian, Rhynie chert. American Journal of Botany 84 (8): 992-1004.
- TAYLOR, T.N., TAYLOR, E.L. AND KRINGS, 2009. Palaeobotany -The Biology and Evolution of fossil Plants. Academic Press New York.
Abstract Views: 314
PDF Views: 119