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Florissantia (plant)

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Florissantia
Temporal range: EoceneOligocene
Florissantia sp. flower
Scientific classification
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Florissantia

Manchester
Species

Florissantia ashwillii
Florissantia quilchenensis
Florissantia speirii

Synonyms

Porana speirii Lesquereux
Holmskioldia speirii MacGinitie
[1]

Florissantia is an extinct flowering plant of prehistoric western North America, from the Eocene to Oligocene Periods of the (56 to 23 million years ago)

Fossils

The plant is known from known from compression fossils of its flowers, fruits, and pollen.

Fossilized remains have been found in several localities, including fossil beds in British Columbia, Washington State, Oregon, and Colorado.[1]


References

  1. ^ a b Manchester, S. R. (1992). "Flowers, fruits and pollen of Florissantia, an extinct malvalean genus from the Eocene and Oligocene of western North America". American Journal of Botany. 79 (9): 996–1008. doi:10.2307/2444909. JSTOR 2444909.


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