Paleocene fossil wood from Patagonia with storied rays and comments on the fossil record of this character

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Abstract

Summary – The storied structure in wood anatomy is considered derived and highly specialized, and is present in some related families. The first records of this character are from the Cretaceous, but it is scarce in the Cretaceous and Paleocene, and apparently absent until the Eocene in the temperate Southern Hemisphere. Using standard methodology, we describe the anatomy of a fossil wood from the early Paleocene of Patagonia (Salamanca Formation). The fossil wood, assigned to a new genus and species Elizabethiaxylon patagonicum related to the Malvaceae, is characterized by its diffuse-porous wood, solitary vessels, simple perforation plates, apotracheal banded axial parenchyma, and mostly biseriate storied rays. The storied structure in this wood is one of the oldest records from Gondwana.

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Ruiz, D. P., Pujana, R. R., & Brea, M. (2023). Paleocene fossil wood from Patagonia with storied rays and comments on the fossil record of this character. IAWA Journal, 45(1), 27–46. https://doi.org/10.1163/22941932-bja10129

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