As the climate cooled and became drier, grasslands replaced forests. Another common plant was kelp, which became a very popular environment. Other plants like oak and beech trees also dominated the landscape.
yes there were plants during this time period. there were trees
It was a bunch of ferns and really tall trees
There is no doubt of it. There were probably millions of plant species that came and went during the Carboniferous.
is a period when an organism growth or activity stops
gestation period of a plant
yes there were plants during this time period. there were trees
cycads
angiosperms
Algae was the dominant plant of the Ordovician. There were little to no other plants (other then algae) during the Ordovician. In the Ordovician, the common types of algae were Stromatolites (Blue green algae), and Tetradium (Red algae).
The period during which life began to move on land was the Ordovician Period. It was during this time that evidence of plant spores from living fossils were found on land.
There was no grass until 23 million years ago in the Neogene period (part of the Cenozoic period). In this same time period there was the development of flowering plants. Some scientists think this harder to eat and digest plant species was in part the cause of the downfall of grazing dinosaurs and the rise of grazing mammals. Grass originated as an evolution from earlier plants in response to environmental pressures.
During spring season when there is active growing period.
In the Upper Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) Period we have extensive evidence for plant life on land (the coal measures), it was also a period when giant insects were to be found and the period during which the reptiles began their evolutionary rise.Remember however that not all organisms leave fossils behind and we can therefore never say what the most common life was, just what life left most traces behind.
there were aracnids, jawed fish,eurypterid and land plant
Michael Charles Boulter has written: 'A palynological study of two of the Neogene plant beds in Derbyshire' -- subject(s): Palynology, Paleobotany
To sustain adverse conditions and its utilization during active period of growth
It was a bunch of ferns and really tall trees