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Big beautiful fossil plant detailed Lepidodendron lycopod young branched twig For Sale


Big beautiful fossil plant detailed Lepidodendron lycopod young branched twig
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Big beautiful fossil plant detailed Lepidodendron lycopod young branched twig:
$55.00


My specimens are genuine and will be delivered with a Certificate of authenticity, age and origin and scientific works copy described this species !

I combine shipping costs.Each item is different, sopleasewait with payment after purchase-I will send You a combine invoice.Usually, it will be cost of shipping the heaviest item.




Specimen: Big, perfect and detailed specimen ofLepidodendron obovatumSTERNBERG" scale tree " lycopod branched twigs !


Locality: All detailed and accurate data will be provided with the specimen


Stratigraphy: Upper Carboniferous –Lower Carboniferous, Mississipian – Serpukhovian - Namurian A


Age:ca. 330 Mya



Matrixdimensions: ca. 18,5 x 7,5 x 4,5 cm ( scale-bar white square on pictures is 1,0 x 1,0 cm )


Description:


Very Detailed specimen ofLepidodendron obovatumSTERNBERG"scale tree " lycopod bark


Lepidodendron(also known as the "Scale tree") is an extinct genus of primitive, vascular, arborescent (tree-like) plant related to the Lycopsids (club mosses). It was part of the coal forest flora. They sometimes reached heights of over 30metres (100 ft), and the trunks were often over 1m (3.3 ft) in diameter, and thrived during the Carboniferous period. Sometimes called "giant club mosses", this is actually not correct as they are actually closer to quillworts than to club mosses. The closely packed diamond-shaped leaf scars left on the trunk and stems as the plant grew provide some of the most interesting and common fossils in Carboniferous shales and accompanying coal deposits. These fossils look much like tire tracks or alligator skin.The scars, or leaf cushions, were composed of green photosynthetic tissue, evidenced by the cuticle covering and being dotted with stomata, microscopic pores through which carbon dioxide from the air diffuses into plants. Likewise, the trunks ofLepidodendronwould have been green, unlike modern trees which have scaly, non-photosynthetic brown or gray bark.Lepidodendronhas been likened to a giant herb. The trunks produced very little, if any, wood. Most structural support came from a thick, bark-like region. This region remained around the trunk as a rigid layer that did not flake off like that of most modern trees. As the tree grew, the leaf cushions expanded to accommodate the increasing width of the trunk.The branches of this plant ended in cone-like structures.Lepidodendrondid not produce seeds like many modern plants. Instead, it reproduced by means of spores. It is estimated that these plants grew rapidly and lived 10–15 years. Some species were probably monocarpic, meaning they reproduced only once toward the end of their life cycle.


Lepidodendronlikely lived in the wettest parts of the coal swamps that existed during the Carboniferous period. They grew in dense stands, likely having as many as 1000 to 2000 giant clubmosses per hectare. This would have been possible because they did not branch until fully grown, and would have spent much of their lives as unbranched poles. In its juvenile stages, the trunk was supported by grass-like leaves that grew straight out of the trunk. By the Mesozoic era, the giant clubmosses had died out and were replaced by smaller clubmosses, probably due to competition from the emerging woody gymnosperms and other plants.Lepidodendronis one of the more common plant fossils found in Pennsylvanian (Late Carboniferous) age rocks. They are closely related to other extinct genera,SigillariaandLepidendropsis.In the 19th Century, due to the reptilian look of the diamond-shaped leaf scar pattern, petrified trunks ofLepidodendronwere exhibited at fairgrounds as giant fossil lizards or snakes. The nameLepidodendroncomes from the Greeklepido, scale, anddendron, tree.


Systematic:


Division: Tracheophyta (Lycoposida)


Class: Lycopodinae


Order: Lycophodiales


Family:Lepidodendraceae


Genus:Lepidodendron


Species: Lepidodendron obovatumSTERNBERG
















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