Poole I, Cantrill DJ, Hayes P, Francis J
School of Earth Sciences, University of Leeds, LS2 9JT, Leeds, UK
Rev Palaeobot Palynol. 2000 Aug 1;111(1-2):127-144. doi: 10.1016/s0034-6667(00)00023-3.
Fossil angiosperm wood from Upper Cretaceous sediments of Livingston Island and James Ross Island in the northern Antarctic Peninsula region is identified as having the combination of anatomical characters most similar to modern Cunoniaceae. The material is characterised by predominantly solitary vessels, opposite to scalariform intervessel pitting, scalariform perforation plates, heterocellular multiseriate and homocellular uniseriate rays, diffuse axial parenchyma. Anatomically, the specimens conform most closely to the fossil organ genus Weinmannioxylon Petriella which has been placed within the Cunoniaceae. The presence of Weinmannioxylon in Late Cretaceous sediments suggests that taxa within or stem taxa to the Cunoniaceae might have been a notable component of the forest vegetation that covered the Antarctic Peninsula during the Late Mesozoic and may therefore represent the earliest record of this family.
来自南极半岛北部利文斯顿岛和詹姆斯罗斯岛白垩纪晚期沉积物中的被子植物化石木材,经鉴定其解剖特征组合与现代 Cunoniaceae 科最为相似。该材料的特征主要为单管孔,与梯状管间纹孔相对,梯状穿孔板,异型多列和同型单列射线,散生轴向薄壁组织。从解剖学上看,这些标本与已归入 Cunoniaceae 科的化石器官属 Weinmannioxylon Petriella 最为相符。Weinmannioxylon 在晚白垩世沉积物中的存在表明,Cunoniaceae 科内的类群或其干群可能是晚中生代覆盖南极半岛的森林植被的重要组成部分,因此可能代表了该科的最早记录。