PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Finding the first flower from Northwest China

Finding the first flower from Northwest China
2021-05-21
(Press-News.org) "Abominable mystery" -- the early origin and evolution of angiosperms (flowering plants) was such described by Charles Robert Darwin. So far, we still have not completely solved the problem, and do not know how the earth evolved into such a colorful and blooming world. Recently, a new angiosperm was reported based on numerous exceptionally well-preserved fossils from the Lower Cretaceous of Jiuquan Basin, West Gansu Province, Northwest China. The new discovery is the earliest and unique record of early angiosperms in Northwest China. The study has been accepted for publication in the journal National Science Review and is currently available online at https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwab084. The new angiosperm was named Gansufructus saligna, and all the fossil specimens were collected from the grayish green mudstone of the upper Zhonggou Formation in Hanxia Section. Remarkably, the plant fossils are almost completely preserved with branched axes, attached leaves and paniculate infructescences, providing valuable materials for the morphological studies of early angiosperms. Gansufructus saligna is erect and graceful, three to four times branched, with alternate arranged axes and leaves. Leaves are simple and willow-shaped, leaf margin is entire, leaf apex is acute and leaf base is decurrent and estipulate with short petiole. Leaf venation is poorly organized with low-rank venations, primary vein prominent, secondary veins pinnate, and tertiary veins reticulate. The infructescences are loose panicles bearing fruits in different stages of maturity. Each fruit is formed from four basally syncarpous carpels borne in a whorle arrangement. And each carpel subtended by a small and persistent tepal at the base and contains three to five anatropous seeds. Gansufructus saligna is supposed to be a small, slender plant with flexible stems, delicate leaves and paniculate infructescences, and is suggested to be a terrestrial herbaceous eudicot based on the morphology of both vegetative and reproductive organs. It probably grew along the lakeshores, where the environment is low-lying and humid. Moreover, the current fossil specimens together with other fossil records of early angiosperms from the Jehol biota and other regions, indicate that the presence of diverse early eudicots of low stature colonizing areas during the middle-late Early Cretaceous. This study is of great significance in exploring the origin, evolution, diversity and habitat preferences of early eudicots.

INFORMATION:

See the article: An Exceptionally Well-Preserved Herbaceous Eudicot from the Early Cretaceous (late Aptian-early Albian) of Northwest China https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwab084


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Finding the first flower from Northwest China

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Russian wildfires and tropospheric ozone pollution over Northern Tibetan Plateau

Russian wildfires and tropospheric ozone pollution over Northern Tibetan Plateau
2021-05-21
Atmospheric ozone, which can regulate the amount of incoming ultraviolet radiation on the Earth's surface, is important for the atmospheric environment and ecosystems. Tropospheric ozone, primarily originating from photochemical reactions, is the third most prominent greenhouse gas causing climate warming. A research team led by Dr. Jinqiang Zhang from the Institute of Atmospheric Physics (IAP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences tried to analyze vertical ozone distributions and explore the influence of deep stratospheric intrusions and wildfires on ozone variation in the northern Tibetan Plateau (TP) during the Asian summer monsoon period. Their findings were published in Atmospheric Research. Ozone variation over the TP can influence weather and climate change. ...

New method of seeing graphene growing using a standard electron microscope

2021-05-21
Researchers from the University of Surrey have revealed a new method that enables common laboratory scanning electron microscopes to see graphene growing over a microchip surface in real time. This discovery, published in ACS Applied Nano Materials, could create a path to control the growth of graphene in production factories and lead to the reliable production of graphene layers. Dispensing with the use of expensive bespoke systems, the new technique not only produces graphene sheets reliably but also allows to use fast-acting catalysts that reduce growth times from several hours to only a few minutes. With the use of video imagining, the team from Surrey's Advanced Technology Institute (ATI) have shown graphene growing over an iron catalyst, using a silicon nitride ...

Who's in this ocean? Tracking down species on the go using environmental DNA

Whos in this ocean? Tracking down species on the go using environmental DNA
2021-05-21
Sloughed off skin and bodily fluids are things most people would prefer to avoid. But for marine biologist like Cheryl Lewis Ames, Associate Professor of Applied Marine Biology in the Graduate School of Agricultural Science at Tohoku University (Japan), such remnants of life have become a magical key to detecting the unseen. Any organism living in the ocean will inevitably leave behind traces containing their DNA - environmental DNA (eDNA) - detectable in water samples collected from the ocean Only recently has molecular sequencing technology become ...

Missing role of finance in climate mitigation scenarios

2021-05-21
Researchers at the University of Zurich show how climate mitigation scenarios can be improved by taking into account that the financial system can play both an enabling or a hampering role on the path to a sustainable economic system. To limit global warming, a profound transformation of energy, production and consumption in our economies is required. The scale of the transformation means that the financial system must have a proactive role. New green investments are needed, as well as a reallocation of capital from high to low-carbon activities. The Central Banks and Supervisors Network for Greening the Financial ...

A new spintronic phenomenon: Chiral-spin rotation found in non-collinear antiferromagnet

A new spintronic phenomenon: Chiral-spin rotation found in non-collinear antiferromagnet
2021-05-21
Researchers at Tohoku University and the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) have discovered a new spintronic phenomenon - a persistent rotation of chiral-spin structure. Their discovery was published in the journal Nature Materials on May 13, 2021. Tohoku University and JAEA researchers studied the response of chiral-spin structure of a non-collinear antiferromagnet Mn3Sn thin film to electron spin injection and found that the chiral-spin structure shows persistent rotation at zero magnetic field. Moreover, their frequency can be tuned by the applied current. "The electrical control of magnetic ...

Infants recognize rapid images, just like adults

Infants recognize rapid images, just like adults
2021-05-21
It has previously been reported that human visual system has a temporal limitation in processing visual information when perceiving things that occur less than half a second apart. This temporal deficit is known as "attentional blink" and has been demonstrated in a large number of studies. These studies reported that adults could recognize two things when these two were temporally separated over 500 ms, but adults overlooked the second thing when the temporal interval was less than 500 ms. Recently, this attentional blink phenomenon has been observed in even preverbal infants less than one-year old. In the study ...

Researchers identify a gene that causes canine hereditary deafness in puppies

2021-05-21
Finnish researchers have been the first to determine the cause for the nonsyndromic early-onset hereditary canine hearing loss in Rottweilers. The gene defect was identified in a gene relevant to the sense of hearing. The study can also promote the understanding of mechanisms of hearing loss in human. Hearing loss is the most common sensory impairment and a complex problem in humans, with varying causes, severity and age of onset. Deafness and hearing loss are fairly common also in dogs, but gene variants underlying the hereditary form of the disorder are so far poorly ...

NIST, collaborators develop new method to better study microscopic plastics in the ocean

NIST, collaborators develop new method to better study microscopic plastics in the ocean
2021-05-21
If you've been to your local beach, you may have noticed the wind tossing around litter such as an empty potato chip bag or a plastic straw. These plastics often make their way into the ocean, affecting not only marine life and the environment but also threatening food safety and human health. Eventually, many of these plastics break down into microscopic sizes, making it hard for scientists to quantify and measure them. Researchers call these incredibly small fragments "nanoplastics" and "microplastics" because they are not visible to the naked eye. Now, in a multiorganizational effort led by the National Institute of Standards and ...

Railway infrastructure susceptible to greater damages from climate change

Railway infrastructure susceptible to greater damages from climate change
2021-05-21
Just half a degree Celsius less warming would save economic losses of Chinese railway infrastructure by approximately $0.63 billion per year, according to a new paper published by a collaborative research team based in Beijing Normal University and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China. The study, which appears in Transportation Research Part D recently, found that the rainfall-induced disaster risk of railway infrastructure has increased with increasing extreme rainfall days during the decades 1981-2016. Limiting global ...

Legitimation strategies for coal exits in Germany and Canada

2021-05-21
Ending our dependence on coal is essential for effective climate protection. Nevertheless, efforts to phase out coal trigger anxiety and resistance, particularly in mining regions. The governments of both Canada and Germany have involved various stakeholders to develop recommendations aimed at delivering just transitions and guiding structural change. In a new study, researchers at the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS) compare the stakeholder commissions convened by the two countries, drawing on expert interviews with their members, and examine how governments use commissions to legitimize their transition policies. In the study, the researchers identify similarities and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study finds moral costs in over-pricing for essentials

Australian scientists uncover secrets of yellow fever

Researchers develop high-performance biochar for efficient carbon dioxide capture

Biodegradable cesium nanosalts activate anti-tumor immunity via inducing pyroptosis and intervening in metabolism

Can bamboo help solve the plastic pollution crisis?

Voting behaviour in elections strongly linked to future risk of death

Significant variations in survival times of early onset dementia by clinical subtype

Research finds higher rare risk of heart complications in children after COVID-19 infection than after vaccination

Oxford researchers develop ‘brain-free’ robots that move in sync, powered entirely by air

The science behind people who never forget a face

Study paints detailed picture of forest canopy damage caused by ‘heat dome’

New effort launched to support earlier diagnosis, treatment of aortic stenosis

Registration and Abstract Submission Open for “20 Years of iPSC Discovery: A Celebration and Vision for the Future,” 20-22 October 2026, Kyoto, Japan

Half-billion-year-old parasite still threatens shellfish

Engineering a clearer view of bone healing

Detecting heart issues in breast cancer survivors

Moffitt study finds promising first evidence of targeted therapy for NRAS-mutant melanoma

Lay intuition as effective at jailbreaking AI chatbots as technical methods

USC researchers use AI to uncover genetic blueprint of the brain’s largest communication bridge

Tiny swarms, big impact: Researchers engineering adaptive magnetic systems for medicine, energy and environment

MSU study: How can AI personas be used to detect human deception?

Slowed by sound: A mouse model of Parkinson’s Disease shows noise affects movement

Demographic shifts could boost drug-resistant infections across Europe

Insight into how sugars regulate the inflammatory disease process

PKU scientists uncover climate impacts and future trends of hailstorms in China

Computer model mimics human audiovisual perception

AC instead of DC: A game-changer for VR headsets and near-eye displays

Prevention of cardiovascular disease events and deaths among black adults via systolic blood pressure equity

Facility-based uptake of colorectal cancer screening in 45- to 49-year-olds after US guideline changes

Scientists uncover hidden nuclear droplets that link multiple leukemias and reveal a new therapeutic target

[Press-News.org] Finding the first flower from Northwest China