Abstract
Permineralized specimens of the pollen organ Gothania (Hirmer) consist of a primary axis bearing pollen cones in the axils of bracts that are four ranked. The bilaterally symmetrical primary axis consists of a uniform parenchymatous pith surrounded by up to 15 endarch‐mesarch axile bundles. The cortex is two‐parted and consists of an inner zone of subepidermal fibers. Bract traces arise from the ends of the ellipsoid stele. Traces to the cones are derived from the open ends of the stele, and at higher levels form a centrarch‐medullated vascular system. Each pollen cone is constructed of up to 25 helically arranged scales, each vascularized by a single trace that may dichotomize. Scales are elongate and broad, and histologically composed of mesophyll parenchyma and fibrous layers. Stomata are restricted to the adaxial surface between rows of fibers. Up to 10 distal scales may be fertile, each with 4 elongate pollen sacs at the tip. Large monosaccate grains of the Felixipollenites‐type are densely packed in each pollen sac. The well‐preserved specimens of Gothania provide an opportunity to compare this genus with pollen cones assigned to the genus Cordaianthus, and to relate isolated plant organs to the Cordaitales.
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