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Anatomy of the Dicotyledons.

L. Chalk, +2 more
- 01 Nov 1950 - 
- Vol. 44, Iss: 3, pp 762
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This article is published in American Midland Naturalist.The article was published on 1950-11-01. It has received 2511 citations till now.

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Caryophyllales: a key group for understanding wood anatomy character states and their evolution.

TL;DR: In this article, an account of character expression diversity is presented for major wood characters of Caryophyllales, including successive cambia, vessel element perforation plates (non-bordered and bordered, with and without constrictions), lateral wall pitting of vessels (notably pseudoscalariform patterns), vesturing and sculpturing on vessel walls, grouping of vessels, nature of tracheids and fibre-tracheids, storying in libriform fibres, types of axial parenchyma, ray anatomy and shifts in ray
Journal ArticleDOI

Emergence and extinction of Dipterocarpaceae in western India with reference to climate change: Fossil wood evidences

TL;DR: The Dipterocarpus Gaert, hopea Roxb. f., and Shorea rossb. as discussed by the authors are described from the Neogene sediments of western India (Rajasthan and Gujarat).
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Vascularização foliar e anatomia do pecíolo de Melastomataceae do cerrado do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil

TL;DR: The variation observed on leaf venation and on petiole anatomy are described and discussed under a taxonomic point of view.
Journal ArticleDOI

Terminology of Imperforate Tracheary Elements - In Defence of Llbriform Fibres With Minutely Bordered Pits

Pieter Baas
- 01 Jan 1986 - 
TL;DR: This note is a reaction to the proposals by Dr. Carlquist (1986), and an argued reiteration of my suggestions for defining \ibri­ form fibres and fibre·tracheids (Baas, 1985), that the definition of a Iibriform fibre as fibre with simple pits is attractive and clear but cannot be upheld in view of the nature of structural variation in hardwoods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leaf anatomy and foliar trichomes in Heliotropiaceae and their systematic relevance

TL;DR: The results of leaf anatomy patterns, especially venation, vascular system, various foliar trichome types, and localization of crystals are of surprisingly high systematic value and prove the actual proposed subdivision of this family based on molecular results.
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