Abstract
The organic chemical profiles of fossil Acer and Quercus leaf tissues are presented and correlated with those of previously described fossil Celtis, Ulmus and Zelkova and interpreted in conjunction with referable extant genera. Intrageneric comparisons among fossil and extant taxa indicate that relatively minor phytochemical differences exist suggesting that little flavonoid and steroid evolution since post-Miocene times has occurred. Biosystematic relationships between living North American and Asian genera indicate that in some cases (Quercus, Zelkova) a greater affinity exists between living Asiatic species and elements of the Succor Creek Flora. The chemical data are proposed as an independent parameter in assessing angiosperm biogeography and proposed migration patterns of the Fagaceae and Ulmaceae. The high chemical fidelity seen between some living and fossil genera preserved in ash-fall deposits is ascribed to the reaction of membrane bound lipids with various organic acids and to subsequent rapid dehydration.
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