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(American Journal of Botany. 1999;86:307-325.)
© 1999 Botanical Society of America, Inc.

Anatomical and developmental study of petrified Quercus (Fagaceae) fruits from the Middle Miocene, Yakima Canyon, Washington, USA1

Sandra J. Borgardt 2, 4 and Kathleen B. Pigg 3

2L. H. Bailey Hortorium, 462 Mann Library, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853-4301 3Department of Plant Biology, Arizona State University, Box 871601, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1601

The first reported petrified acorns to show internal anatomical structure are here described from Middle Miocene (~15.6 million years old) chert of the Columbia River Basalt Group in Yakima Canyon, Washington. Quercus hiholensis Borgardt et Pigg sp. nov. is described from anatomical and morphological fruit features, as well as a little recognized anatomical feature, the umbilical complex. Acorns, each comprising a nut and its cupule, are up to 15.3 mm long and 18.8 mm wide with helically arranged, imbricate, tuberculate cupule scales. They show basal aborted ovules, short styles, broad stigmas, and lack grooves in their cotyledons. These characters and the developmental pattern seen in these fossil acorns demonstrate that Q. hiholensis conforms to genus Quercus (Fagaceae), subgenus Quercus, section Quercus (the white oaks). The correspondence of Q. hiholensis to the modern section Quercus reveals that the derived floral and fruit characters that distinguish section Quercus within the genus had evolved by the Middle Miocene.

Key Words: acorn • cupule • Fagaceae • fossil • fruit • Middle Miocene • paleobotany • Quercus




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