|
Definition of Genus Thyrsopteris
1. Noun. One species.
Group relationships: Dicksoniaceae, Family Dicksoniaceae
Member holonyms: Thyrsopteris, Thyrsopteris Elegans
Lexicographical Neighbors of Genus Thyrsopteris
Literary usage of Genus Thyrsopteris
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Reports Dealing with the Systematic Geology and Paleontology of Maryland by Maryland Geological Survey (1911)
"These I place provisionally in the genus Thyrsopteris, on account of the great
... The genus Thyrsopteris seems to be eminently a Jurassic type of fern. ..."
2. A Thousand Days in the Arctic by Frederick George Jackson (1899)
"... amurensis as given by Heer.t but it seems best, for the present, to leave them
in the genus Thyrsopteris. In none of these forms, however, ..."
3. A Thousand Days in the Arctic by Frederick George Jackson (1899)
"... amurensis as given by Heer.t but it seems best, for the present, to leave them
in the genus Thyrsopteris. In none of these forms, however, ..."
4. Fossil Botany: Being an Introduction to Palaeophytology from the Standpoint by Hermann Solms-Laubach, Henry Edward Fowler Garnsey (1891)
"A number of fossil remains have been directly united with the recent monotypic
genus Thyrsopteris, ..."
5. Contributions to the Paleobotany of Peru, Bolivia and Chile: Five Papers by Edward Wilber Berry (1922)
"In so far as the meager material permits a judgment the fossil agrees more closely
with the genus Thyrsopteris than with the other genera of the family, ..."
6. Geological Magazine by Henry Woodward (1901)
"... genus Thyrsopteris, of which a single species survives in the island of Juan
Fernandez. Among the numerous remains showing ..."
7. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1895)
"... is really that exceedingly abundant genus Thyrsopteris, which numbers 40
species in the American beds. This would restore the relative proportions. ..."
8. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1895)
"... is really that exceedingly abundant genus Thyrsopteris, which numbers 40
species in the American beds. This would restore the relative proportions. ..."