3.9 Article

The first fossil record of a giant horsetail (Equisetum, Equisetaceae) is from the Miocene of Patagonia, Argentina

Journal

ANDEAN GEOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 273-287

Publisher

SERVICIO NACIONAL GEOLOGIA MINERVA
DOI: 10.5027/andgeoV49n1-3417

Keywords

Equisetales; Ferns; Pteridophyta; Miocene; ?irihuau Formation; Paleoflora; Paleoenvironment

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This study describes the first record of a Miocene macroflora from the ??irihuau Formation sediments in Quebrada Vera, Patagonia, Argentina. The fossil assemblage consists mainly of Equisetum remains, along with four fern morphotypes. The large size and regular branching of the Equisetum stems suggest they represent a new fossil species. This finding is significant in the fields of biogeography and evolution, as it is the first conclusive record of a giant Equisetum worldwide.
A Miocene macroflora recovered from ??irihuau Formation sediments exposed at Quebrada Vera site in northwesterern Patagonia, Argentina, is recorded and described for the first time. The assemblage is composed exclusively of free-sporing plants, mainly by Equisetum remains with subordinate occurrences of four fern morphotypes (represented by bi-, tri-and pinnate fronds). Equisetum imprints and molds include distinctive jointed stems with whorls of linear and basally fused leaves, numerous scars of lateral branches arranged in a radially symmetrical pattern situated at the nodes, and nodal diaphragms of up to 4 cm in diameter. The large size and regular branching of the stems link the fossils to the South American giant members of the genus and they probably represent a new fossil species. This is the first conclusive fossil record of a giant Equisetum worldwide, and consequently, it is biogeographically and evolutionarily relevant. The new findings attest that members of the giant horsetail clade were components of the Patagonian vegetation in the Miocene, implying that the age of the clade must predate that estimated from morphological and/or molecular data. The plant fossil assemblage represents part of a wetland community probably growing close to a riverside or lakeshore in coincidence with previous sedimentological estimates.

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