This is the "Fossil Friday" post #214. Expect this to be a somewhat regular feature of the website. We will post any fossil pictures you send in to [email protected]. Please include a short description or story. Check the #FossilFriday Twitter hash tag for contributions from around the world!
-----------------------------------------------------
Today, we have a very large single pinnule of Alethopteris sullivanti (see Mazon Monday #37). A. sullivanti is a seed fern (Pteridospermatophyta), which is a group of plants that went extinct during the late Cretaceous Period. It was described by Leo Lesquereux in 1869. It was named for William Starling Sullivant (1803-1873). Sullivant was an American botanist and a friend and colleague of Lesquereux. Sullivant and Lesquereux published two editions of the book Musci Boreali-Americani Quorum Specimina Exsiccata (1856, 1865), which is about mosses indigenous to eastern North America.
Specimens of Alethopteris are often 3 dimensional and can be quite striking. This large specimen was found in the Pit 3 locality in the spring of 2024.