The Early Middle Eocene Wagon Bed Carpoflora Of Central Wyoming, U. S. A.
Author
Tiffney, Bruce H.
Author
Manchester, Steven R.
text
Fossil Imprint
2022
2022-08-26
78
1
51
79
http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/fi.2022.004
journal article
10.37520/fi.2022.004
2533-4069
7167719
Genus
Saxifragispermum
E.REID et M.
CHANDLER
Text-fig. 2a–g
M a t e r i a l. One specimen, silicified exterior with original internal organic material. USNM PAL 772341.
D e s c r i p t i o n. A loculicidal capsule, narrowly ovate to ovate in side view (
Text-fig. 2a, b
), rounded/four angled in cross section (
Text-fig. 2c–d
),
10.2 mm
long and 4.1 ×
4.9 mm
in width. The four angles each with a central linear groove suggestive of a plane of weakness (
Text-fig. 2a, b
). The grooves meet at the pointed apex and converge on an inflated and protruding point of attachment at the base. The grooves circumscribe four valves that are evenly pitted on their surface. An equatorial transverse cut revealed a geode lined by quartz crystals, lacking preservation of wall structure and placentae, but with central cavity filled with ovoid structures resembling seeds within a tangle of soft, whitish threads interpreted as trichomes or fibers (
Text-fig. 2e–g
).
D i s c u s s i o n. This specimen resembles, in its exterior form, the fruits of
Saxifragispermum spinosissimum
E.REID et M.CHANDLER
, previously described from the London Clay flora (
Reid and Chandler 1933
,
Chandler 1961
), and
S. tetragonalis
MANCHESTER
from the Clarno flora (
Manchester
1994
). While the specimens from those sites are permineralized and preserve the cellular structure of the fruit, the Wagon Bed specimen is a cast with a hollow center. Cutting the specimen transversely in half revealed a peripheral lining of quartz crystals and a central unmineralized cavity filled with apparent original material including a matrix of thin whitish threads that might be trichomes or fibers, surrounding brown ellipsoidal structures resembling seeds (
Text-fig. 2e, f
). Despite the implications of the generic name
Saxifragispermum
as assigned by
Reid and Chandler (1933)
, it was subsequently allied with the
Flacourtiaceae DC.
(
Chandler 1961
,
Manchester
1994
) which has been subsumed in the
Salicaceae (
Boucher et al. 2003
)
. Assignment of the Wagon Bed specimen to this family cannot be absolutely confirmed because the distinctive parietal placentation seen in the London Clay and Clarno specimens is not preserved. However, the overall morphology of the fruit (four-valved, angled capsule, coupled with seeds embedded in a fibrous matrix) closely resembles that of the London Clay and Clarno taxa, although the Wagon Bed specimen is closer in size to the Clarno species.
The thread-like locule filling of this specimen, like that of the Clarno and London Clay specimens, is suggestive of the tightly packed plumed seeds of extant
Salix
L. and
Populus
L. fruits. The Wagon Bed occurrence extends the North American range of the genus to the Rocky Mountains. In the Green River Formation,
Salicaceae
are represented by compressed fruit capsules as well as leaves of
Populus
(
Manchester
et al. 2006
) and
Pseudosalix
L.BOUCHER
,
MANCHESTER
et JUDD (
Boucher et al. 2003
). Although it is difficult to make a detailed comparison because of the different modes of preservation, there is a noteworthy similarity between
Saxifragispermum
and the capsules of
Populus tidwellii
MANCHESTER
et JUDD from
Utah
and
P. cinnamomoides
(LESQ.) MACGINITIE
from
Wyoming
as illustrated in
Manchester
et al. (2006
: e.g., figs 5e, f,
6g
–k).