ABSTRACTDecaying logs on the forest fl oor can act as “nurse logs” for new seedlings, helping with the regeneration of the vegetation. Fossil evi-dence of this ecological strategy is exceptionally well preserved in the Argentinean Andes, where an ~300 m.y. old permineralized for-est was found at 3000 m elevation in San Juan Province. The fossil trunks, some of them in life position, are intercalated between volca-nic rocks and sediments deposited in fl ooded environments (probably coastal lagoons). More than 100 specimens studied allow us to suggest the dominance of only one tree species in the forest. The fi rst issue of the research was to determine the means used by the vegetation to survive in such adverse environmental conditions. Fossil evidence supports the hypothesis of regeneration via nurse logs. Little rootlets preserved inside the wood of several specimens indicate that seedlings developed on these logs. Important additional information provided by the fossils is the presence of aerenchymatic tissue in the rootlets. Aerenchyma tissue is a common feature developed in plants living in fl ooded environments; therefore its recognition in the fossil forest helps in the ecological interpretation.INTRODUCTION