SCIENTIFIC INTERESTS

Paleobotany of Madeira Island

What is the origin of the flora of Madeira? This simple question leads us to the study of Paleobotany (the study of fossil plants) - plants that have been preserved by geological processes, giving us clues about the past.

On the island of Madeira the report of these types of fossils leads us back to the first half of the nineteenth century, when science was undergoing major paradigm shift and when many pioneering studies in the field of geology and biology were performed.

Among these scientists was Sir. Charles Lyell (1797-1875), the famous British geologist. He traveled to Madeira Island to perform field work in search of proofs to how oceanic islands were formed.

In 1854 he finds, along with George Hartung (a German naturalist then living on the island) a leaf-bed full of fossils of laurels and ferns at S. Jorge. They collected several specimens at the time, and some of them were studied by some of the greatest authorities on paleobotany of the nineteenth century.

In the same trip, Lyell also described sedimentary from Porto da Cruz, which five years later would also produce macrofossil plants. Today, despite these studies having almost 160 years, they continue to be the main references on the Paleobotany of Madeira Island.

My current MSc. Thesis research is, with the aid of the XIX century literature (biographic papers, letters and manuscripts), to rewrite the history of these collections and review them into the light of actual paleobotany and geology of Madeira island.

The quests for finding these fossils, have lead me into some UK museums (like the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, at Cambridge and the Natural History Museum, London), into field work to re-locate the leaf-beds and collect more fossils and study living specimens for comparisons with fossil material.


Contact

Grupo de Botânica da Madeira


News

27/08/2019 12:08

New paper: The loss of a unique palaeobotanical site in Terceira Island within the Azores UNESCO Global Geopark (Portugal)

Available here: link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12371-019-00401-1 or rdcu.be/bPbkl Reference: Góis-Marques, C.A., Elias, R.B., Steinbauer, M.J., de Nascimento, L., Fernández-Palacios, J.M., Menezes de Sequeira, M. & Madeira, J. 2019. The loss of a unique...

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21/02/2019 12:51

New Paper published: Eurya stigmosa (Theaceae), a new and extinct record for the Calabrian stage of Madeira Island (Portugal): 40Ar/39Ar dating, palaeoecological and oceanic island palaeobiogeographical implications.

A new paper describing a new and extinct Theaceae for Madeira Island was recently published in the journal Quaternary Science Review. You can check it out in: www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379118309284 This discovery was also reported portuguese...

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18/08/2018 09:22

FloraMac2018 congress, Funchal, Madeira Island (Portugal)

Please visit us at: www.uma.pt/floramac2018  Late Registrations still available. See you soon in Funchal!  

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02/01/2018 21:55

Congress FloraMac 2018 | Funchal | September 12-15

Official website comming soon! First circular: https://www.facebook.com/FloraMac2018/ or twitter.com/FloraMac2018

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15/01/2016 11:42

New Doctors in Biological Sciences

We are proud to announce that we have two new doctors in our Group: Zita Ferreira defended successfully her PhD. thesis entitled: “Biosystematics of the genus Andryala L. (Asteraceae)”.   Zita Ferreira thesis committee, from left to right: Miguel Sequeira, Carlos Neto, Jorge Capelo, Enrique...

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02/10/2014 11:42

XVII Congress of European Mycologists

Our Group is co-organizing the XVII Congress of European Mycologists, that will be held in Madeira Island in September 2015. Registration opening soon at www.xviicem.org. 

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29/07/2014 13:36

New Paper: Andryala perezii (Asteraceae), a New Species from the Canary Islands

Recently a new species of Andryala was described by our group. The study was published in the journal Novon: A Journal for Botanical Nomenclature, entitled "Andryala perezii (Asteraceae), a New Species from the Canary Islands". The comparison of Madeira and Canaries Island plants allowed...

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16/07/2013 14:13

Visitors notice

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16/07/2013 14:12

Website launched

Our new website has been launched today. Tell your visitors why you have started a new presentation and how it benefits them. Mention your goals and project advantages. Try to briefly give your visitors reasons why they should return to your pages.

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