Type specimens
1,100
Petrified trunk of the fern Palaeosmunda williamsonii, from Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia. This fossil dates to the Permian, about 250-299 million years ago.
1,100
250,000
30,000
The Museum's palaeobotany collection spans the Archean to the present, containing cyanobacteria and fungi as well as plants.
Our collections are among the most important palaeobotanical collections worldwide with respect to geographic, stratigraphic and historical coverage.
There is a particular abundance of fossils from:
The fossils range in size from microscopic cuticle preparations to a 15m-long tree.
The palaeobotany collection is being digitised
If you would like to use any specimens for research
Our collection of fossil plants represents over 400 million years of plant evolution from the Silurian/Devonian to the present.
Other groups such as the algae have been collected from much older strata, with specimens from the Precambrian onwards in the collection.
The collection features palaeobotanical material from all over the world.
Access to some collections will be affected as we prepare for the move to our new collections, science and digitisation centre.
Scientists and collections management specialists can visit the collections and borrow specimens for research.
Our duty is to provide a safe and secure environment for all of our collections.