Your Legacy on Earth May Be a Plant (worldsensorium.com)
World's oldest trees reveal the largest solar storm in history (bigthink.com)
A Canadian lake holds the key to the beginning of the Anthropocene, a new geological epoch (theconversation.com)
12,000 years of global land use history - Anthromes 12K DGG (v1) Web App – Anthroecology Lab (anthroecology.org)
Challenges and opportunities of communicating interdisciplinary paleoscience: An early-career researchers’ perspective | PAGES (pastglobalchanges.org)
How A National Monument Full of Fossils Was Stolen to Death: Fossil Cycad National Monument held America’s richest deposit of petrified cycadeoid plants, until it didn’t. (www.atlasobscura.com)
Common patterns of macroevolution - Nature Ecology & Evolution (www.nature.com)
Fossilised beaches help scientists understand impacts of past global warming (www.plymouth.ac.uk)
A 407-million-year-old plant’s leaves skipped the usual Fibonacci spirals: The ancient leaves were arranged in spiral patterns uncommon in modern land plants (www.sciencenews.org)
World’s largest ocean ‘dead zone’ was well oxygenated during past warm period (www.nature.com)
Ecologists Use Museum Specimens to Dig into the Parasitic Past (www.the-scientist.com)
Study estimates land use changes in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (phys.org)
How ‘parachute science’ in paleontology plays out in 3 countries | Science News (www.sciencenews.org)
Modern horses have lost their additional toes, scientists confirm (phys.org)
Brazilian fossil provides earliest evidence of evolutionary trait that enabled dinosaurs to become giants (phys.org)
How did snakes lose their limbs? Mass genome effort provides clues (www.science.org)
These long-necked reptiles were decapitated by their predators, fossil evidence confirms (phys.org)
New species and genus of ancient bear-like arctoid found in North Dakota (phys.org)
13,000 Years Ago, Ancient Humans Likely Helped Drive a Mass Extinction in North America (www.inverse.com)
Attacks on archaeology will harm efforts to restore the natural world (www.inkcapjournal.co.uk)
Worth reading as someone that combines the palaeoecology and the archaeology. :)