FOSSIL CORYLOPSIS AND FOTHERGILLA LEAVES (HAMAMELIDACEAE) FROM THE LOWER EOCENE FLORA OF REPUBLIC, WASHINGTON, U.S.A., AND THEIR EVOLUTIONARY AND BIOGEOGRAPHIC SIGNIFICANCE

2005 
Corylopsis reedae Radtke, Pigg et Wehr sp. nov. and Fothergilla malloryi Radtke, Pigg et Wehr sp. nov. (Hamamelidaceae) are described from the lower Eocene (49–50 million years ago) Republic flora of northeastern Washington State. Corylopsis reedae is the first unequivocal fossil leaf report of Corylopsis Siebold & Zucc. (cv. Winter Hazel). The species is based on a single specimen that is 1.9 cm wide, preserved for 3.4 cm in length and estimated to be ca. 4 cm long, with an asymmetrical base and teeth that are concave apical, straight basal, with simple apices. The fossil leaf is remarkably similar to extant Corylopsis, with prominent compound agrophic veins; strong, straight secondaries; and closely spaced, ladder‐rung‐like, opposite to alternate percurrent tertiaries at right angles to the secondaries. Today this genus occurs only in Asia, but the fossil record, primarily of seeds, indicates it was widely distributed in North America and Europe during the Tertiary. Fothergilla malloryi documents conclu...
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