PINUS WOLFEI,A NEW PETRIFIED CONE FROM THE EOCENE OF WASHINGTON |
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Authors: | Charles N. Miller. Jr. |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, University of Montana, Missoula, 59801 |
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Abstract: | A silicified cone from the Late Eocene of Washington is described as a new fossil species of Pinus. The cone was probably 9–10 cm long and 3–5 cm at its widest diam in the living condition and is peculiar in having abundant resin canals in the secondary xylem of the axis arranged in three concentric rings near the cone base. The bract of the fossil is also unusual in having resin canals of distinctly unequal sizes and a vascular strand that is adaxially concave. In the absence of external features of the scale tips, these anatomical conditions along with the construction of the outer cortex of the axis of thick-walled cells suggest closest affinity of the new species with the subsections Contortae, Oocarpae, and Sylvestres of the section Pinus, subgenus Pinus. |
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