The Late Early Pleistocene Flora Of Oriolo, Faenza (Italy): Assembly Of The Modern Forest Biome
Author
Denk, Thomas
Author
Sami, Marco
Author
Teodoridis, Vasilis
Author
Martinetto, Edoardo
text
Fossil Imprint
2022
2022-08-26
78
1
217
262
http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/fi.2022.009
journal article
10.37520/fi.2022.009
2533-4069
7167867
Carya
cf.
minor
SAPORTA
, 1873
Text-fig. 9a–e
1873
Carya minor
SAPORTA
, p. 217.
1876
Juglans minor
(SAPORTA) SAPORTA et MARION
, p. 166, pl. 37, figs 1–6.
1970
Carya
cf.
minor
SAPORTA
; Pavia, pl. 3, fig. 5.
2001
Carya
cf.
minor
SAPORTA
; Martinetto and Sami, p. 17, textfig. 10.
M a t e r i a l. Oriolo MSF 631, 631-1, 631-2, 634, 634-1, 635, 639, 690, 691, 755, 756, 757-1, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 777.
D e s c r i p t i o n. Leaflet, petiolate, petiole <
2 mm
long, lamina elliptic, ovate or obovate,
39–124 mm
long,
18–57 mm
wide, base cuneate decurrent, acute rounded, apex acute or acuminate, secondary venation mixed brochidodromous, semicraspedodromous, secondary veins branching close to leaf margin or rarely close to primary vein, secondary veins and intersecondary veins spaced 2–4 per
1 cm
primary vein, margin sharply serrate.
R e m a r k s. The material from Oriolo is closely similar to leaves/leaflets of
C
.
minor
from the Pliocene of Meximieux (
France
) and Willershausen (
Germany
) in some instances (densely spaced, regular secondaries forming a brochidodromous pattern of loops), while other leaflets have a more irregular pattern of secondary veins. From Miocene strata of
France
and Crete,
Kvaček et al. (2011)
and
Zidianakis et al. (2020)
described dispersed leaves and leaflets of
Carya
as
Carya
sp.
, accounting for differences in secondary venation with known western Eurasian Neogene species of
Carya
.
Pavia (1970)
reported a very similar leaflet from Arboschio (Pliocene).