Archaeopteris

Archaeopteris
Archaeopteris hibernica
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Class: Progymnospermopsida
Order: Archaeopteridales
Family: Archaeopteridaceae
Genus: Archaeopteris
Dawson (1871)
Species
  • Archaeopteris fissilis
  • Archaeopteris gaspiensis
  • Archaeopteris halliana
  • Archaeopteris hibernica
  • Archaeopteris macilenta
  • Archaeopteris notosaria
  • Archaeopteris obtusa
  • Archaeopteris sphenophyllifolia

Archaeopteris is an extinct genus of progymnosperm tree with fern-like leaves. A useful index fossil, this tree is found in strata dating from the Upper Devonian to Lower Carboniferous (383 to 323 million years ago), the oldest fossils being 385 million years old,[1] and had global distribution.

Until the 2007 discovery of Wattieza, many scientists considered Archaeopteris to be the earliest known tree. Bearing buds, reinforced branch joints, and branched trunks similar to today's woody plants, it is more reminiscent of modern seed-bearing trees than other spore-bearing taxa. It combines characteristics of woody trees and herbaceous ferns, and belongs to the progymnosperms, a group of extinct plants more closely related to seed plants than to ferns, but unlike seed plants, reproducing using spores like ferns.

A reconstruction of Archaeopteris macilenta from the Late Devonian, Walton Formation of Hancock, New York
A polished round of permineralised wood of Callixylon whiteanum from the Late Devonian Woodford Shale of Ada, Oklahoma