Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2004
Publication Title
Rhodora
Abstract
Fossil leaves assigned to the disjunct rosaceous genus Neviusia A. Gray, N. dunthornei DeVore, Moore, Pigg & Wehr sp. nov. (Rosaceae, tribe Kerrieae) are described from the lower-middle Eocene One Mile Creek locality near the town of Princeton, southern British Columbia, Canada. The leaves are elliptic to broadly ovate, seven-lobed, up to 4.9 cm long X 5.6 cm wide with craspedodromous venation and two to three sizes of marginal teeth. They bear a striking resemblance to N. cliftonii Shevock, Ertter & Taylor, the recently discovered species of the Mount Shasta area of northern California, and differ markedly from the type species N. alabamensis A. Gray of southeastern North America. The occurrence in the Okanogan Highlands of N. dunthornei marks the first fossil evidence for the small, rosaceous tribe Kerrieae, and further documents the lower-middle Eocene as a time of major radiation of many temperate families, including the Rosaceae.
Department
Biological and Environmental Sciences
Volume Number
106
Issue Number
927
First Page
197
Last Page
209
Recommended Citation
DeVore, M.L., Moore, S.M., Pigg, K.B., & Wehr, W.C. (2004). Fossil Neviusia leaves (Rosaceae: Kerrieae) from the lower-middle eocene of southern British Columbia. Rhodora, 106(927), 197-209.
Comments
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 3.0)