Abstract

The compositions of terpenoids from the seed cones and resins of selected fossil and modern species of pine (Pinus, Pinaceae) were analysed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) to study the preservation of chemosystematic markers (biomarkers) in fossil conifers. Diterpenoids of the abietane, pimarane, isopimarane, and labdane types are the major components in the solvent extracts of all fossil and extant pines. Mono- and sesquiterpenoids of the bornane and cadalane classes and two phytosterols were also identified. The terpenoid patterns of the fossil species largely match the terpenoids observed in modern pines. The characteristic features of the fossil and extant Pinus species are abietane-, pimarane-, and isopimarane-type diterpenoids with a high abundance of abietic acids. Several biomolecules were preserved unaltered in the Eocene and Oligocene pine cones. In addition to the biomolecules, the fossil pines contain a series of degradation products (geomolecules) that were generated from their biological precursors before and after burial. The generation of the geomolecules is governed by various oxidative and reductive processes, such as microbial degradation and clay catalysis. In conclusion, the comparative analysis of solvent-extractable biomarkers in fossil and related extant species is a valuable tool for (palaeo)chemosystematic studies of conifers. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2007, 154, 129–140.

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