Abstract

Specimens preserved in coal balls collected from the Herrin (No. 6) Coal in Illinois reveal the internal structure of the pteridosperm pollen organ long known as the compression fossil, Potoniea. Cylindrical sporangia are concentrically arranged in a campanulate body and the end of each sporangium projects freely from the distal face of the organ. Pollen is trilete and without a distal germinal aperture. The exine is structureless and has a separable, perine‐like layer adorned with orbicules.

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