Srivastava A.K. et Rigby J.F. Sphenophyllum, Trizygia, and Gondwanophyton from the Barakar Formation of Raniganj Coalfi eld, with a revision of Lower Gondwana Sphenophyllales // Geophytology,
1983, V. 13, pp. 55–62.
Steemans P., Hérissé le A. et Bozdogan N. Ordovician and Silurian crypto-spores and miospores from southeastern Turkey // Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 1996, V. 93, № 1–4, pp. 35–76.
Stein W.E., Mannolini F., Her-nick L.V. A., Landing E. et Berry Ch.M. Giant cladoxylopsid trees resolve the enigma of the Earth’s earliest forest stumps at Gilboa // Nature, 2007, V. 446, № 7138, pp. 904–907.
Stein W.E., Berry Ch.M., Her-nick L.V. A. et Mannolini F. Surprisingly complex community discovered in the mid-Devonian fossil forest at Gilboa // Nature, 2012, V. 483, № 7387, pp. 78–81.
Stewart W.N. et Rothwell G.W. Paleobotany and the evolution of plants. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1993, 410 p.
Strother P.K., Al-Hajri S. et Traverse A. New evidence for land plants from the lower Middle Ordovician of Saudi Arabia // Geology, 1996, V. 24, pp. 55–58.
Swanepoel W., Chase M.W., Christenhusz M.J. M., Maurin O., Forest F. et Van Wyk A.E. From the frying pan: an unusual dwarf shrub from Namibia turns out to be a new brassicalean family // Phyto-taxa, 2020, V. 439, № 3, pp. 171–185.
Szabóová M., Záhorský M., Gažo J., Geuens J., Vermoesen A., D’Hondt E. et Hricová A. Differences in seed weight, amino acid, fatty acid, oil, and squalene content in γ-irradiation-developed and commercial amaranth varieties (Amaranthus spp.) // Plants, 2020, V. 9, № 1412, pp. 1–15.
Tanasi D., Greco E., Di Tullio V., Capitani D., Gullì D. et Ciliberto E. H-H NMR 2D-TOCSY, ATR FT-IR and SEM-EDX for the identification of organic residues on Sicilian prehistoric pottery // Microchemical Journal, 2017, V. 135, pp. 140–147.
Taylor Th.N., Taylor E.L. et Proceedings of the National Academy of
Krings M. Paleobotany, the biology and Sciences, USA, 2018, V. 115, № 46, pp.
evolution of fossil plants. Amsterdam, 11742–11747.
Tang Q., Pang K., Yuan X. et Xiao Sh. A one-billion-year-old multicellular chlorophyte // Nature Ecology & Evolution, 2020, V. 4, pp. 543–549.
Taterka F. The secretary bird of of Deir el-Bahari: one more piece to the puzzle of the location of the Land of Punt // Revue d Égyptologie, 2019, V. 69, pp. 231–250.
Boston, Academic Press, 2009, 1230 p.
Taylor Th.N. The origin of land plants: a paleobotanical perspective // Taxon, 1982, V. 31, № 2, pp. 155–177.
Tengberg M. Beginnings and early history of date palm garden cultivation in the Middle East // Journal of Arid Environments, 2012, V. 86, pp. 139–147.
The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group. An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG III // Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, V. 161, pp. 105–121.
The origins and spread of domestic plants in Southwest Asia and Europe. Eds.: Colledge S. et Connoly J. Walnut Creek, CA, Left Coast Press, 2007, 446 p.
Thieme H. Lower Palaeolithic hunting spears from Germany // Nature, 1997, V. 385, pp. 807–810.
Tiffney B.H. Seed size, dispersal syndromes, and the rise of the Angiosperms: evidence and hypothesis // Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1984, V. 71, № 2 (Historical perspectives of Angiosperm evolution), pp. 551–576.
Townrow J.A. On Rissikia and Mataia Podocarpaceous conifers from the Lower Mesozoic of southern lands // Papers and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania, 1967, V. 101, pp. 103–138.
Traiser Ch., Klotz S., Uhl D. et Mosbrugger V. Environmental signals from leaves – a physiognomic analysis of European vegetation // New Phytologist, 2005, V. 166, № 2, pp. 465–484.
Tungpradit R., Sinchaikul S., Phutrakul S., Wongkham W. et Chen Sh.-T. Anti-cancer compound screening and isolation: Coscinium fenestratum, Tinospora crispa and Tinospora cordifolia // Chiang Mai Journal of Science, 2010, V. 37, № 3, pp. 476–488.
Tushingham Sh., Snyder Ch.M.,
Brownstein K.J., Damitio W.J. et
Gang D.R. Biomolecular archaeology reveals ancient origins of indigenous tobacco smoking in North American Plateau //
Ungar P.S. et Sponheimer M. The diets of early hominins // Science, 2011, V. 334, № 6053, pp. 190–193.
Utami S.S. et Van Hooff Ja.A. R. A.M. Meat-eating by adult female Sumatran orangutans (Pongo pygmæus abelii) // American Journal of Primatology, 1997, V. 43, № 2, pp. 159–165.
Valamoti S.M. Harvesting the «wild»? Exploring the context of fruit and nut exploitation at Neolithic Dikili Tash, with special reference to wine // Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, 2015, V. 24, pp. 35–46.
Valmalette J.Ch., Dombrovsky A., Brat P., Mertz Ch., Capovilla M. et Robichon A. Light- induced electron transfer and ATP synthesis in a carotene synthesizing insect // Scientific Reports, 2012, V. 2, № 579, pp. 1–8.
Vascular plants and paleobotany. Ed.:
Stewart Ph. Toronto, New York, Apple
Academic Press, 2012, 310 p.
Vignolini S., Thomas M.M., Kolle M., Wenzel T., Rowland A., Rudall P.J., Baumberg J.J., Glover B.J. et Steiner U. Directional scattering from the glossy flower of Ranunculus: how the buttercup lights up your chin // Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 2011, pp. 1–7.
Villa P., Soriano S., Tsanova T., Degano I., Higham Th.F. G., d’Errico F., Back-well L., Lucejko J.J., Colombini M.P. et Beaumont P.B. Border Cave and the be-
Wattanathorn J., Uabundit N., Hook. f. (Welwitschiaceae, Gnetopsida)
Itarat W., Mucimapura S., Laopa- // Phyton, 1999, V. 39, № 1, pp. 167– tarakasem P. et Sripanidkulchai B. Neu- 183.
ginning of the Later Stone Age in South Africa // Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 2012, V. 109, № 33, pp. 13208–13213.
Villa P., Pollarolo L., Degano I., Biro-lo L., Pasero M., Biagioni C., Douka K., Vinciguerra R., Lucejko J.J. et Wadley L. A milk and ochre paint mixture used 49,000 years ago at Sibudu, South Africa // PLoS One, 2015, V. 10, №e0131273, pp. 1–12.
Vu G.T. H., Schmutzer Th., Bull F., Cao H.X., Fuchs J., Tran T.D., Jovtchev G., Pistrick