thumb|right|A fossil Betula leopoldae ([[birch) leaf from the Early Eocene of Washington state, approximately 49 million years ago]]
thumb|right|A fossil Betula leopoldae ([[birch) leaf from the Early Eocene of Washington state, approximately 49 million years ago]]
Paleobotany or palaeobotany, also known as paleophytology, is the branch of botany dealing with the recovery and identification of plant fossils from geological contexts, and their use for the biological reconstruction of past environments (paleogeography), and the evolutionary history of plants, with a bearing upon the evolution of life in general. It is a component of paleontology and paleobiology. The prefix palaeo- or paleo- means "ancient, old", and is derived from the Greek adjective , . Paleobotany includes the study of land plants, as well as the study of prehistoric marine photoautotrophs such as photosynthetic algae, seaweeds or kelp. A closely related field is palynology, which is the study of fossilized and extant spores and pollen.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).