About: Sequoioideae is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10 publications have been published within this topic receiving 86 citations. The topic is also known as: redwood tree.
TL;DR: In this article, fragments of silicified wood specimens were found in the EI Barranquillo outcrop (Castellote, Teruel, Spain) in the Aragonese branch of the Iberian Range.
Abstract: In this paper we describe fragments of silicified wood specimens found in “EI Barranquillo” outcrop (Castellote, Teruel, Spain) in the Aragonese branch of the Iberian Range. This new species without any growth ring and with mixed radial pitting could represent an ancestral form of the modern Sequoioideae subfamily. This anatomical study, in association with an observation of the lithological facies, the position and the preservation of the fossil woods, evidences a subtropical climate with abundant precipitation and without seasonal contrasts, during the deposition of the Utrillas Formation.
TL;DR: The general aspect of the tracheids and rays, presence of taxodioid cross-field pits, and abundant axial parenchyma, indicate M. triassicum can be related to the taxodiaceous Cupressaceae sensu lato.
TL;DR: In this paper, six Upper Oligocene mummified fossil wood samples originating from the Agacli Lignite Quarry near Istanbul (Turkey) were anatomically studied and identified as Sequoioxylon.
Abstract: Six Upper Oligocene mummified fossil wood samples originating from the Agacli Lignite Quarry near Istanbul (Turkey) were anatomically studied and identified as Sequoioxylon. This record increases the understanding of the palaeoenvironments of Turkey during the Oligocene and thus represents an important contribution to the poorly understood vegetation existing between Europe and Asia during the Tertiary.
TL;DR: The new genus Krassilovidendron shares the greatest number of features with Sequoia Endlicher and Sequoiadendron Buchholz, and fewer characters with Metasequoia Miki ex Hu et W.C. Cheng.
TL;DR: An anatomically preserved seed cone from Late Cretaceous sediments of the Yezo Group on the Japanese Island of Hokkaido documents additional diversity among sequoioid conifers, and reveals previously unknown mechanisms for pollination and post-pollination seed enclosure in the conifer family Cupressaceae.
Abstract: An anatomically preserved seed cone from Late Cretaceous (Santonian–Coniacian) sediments of the Yezo Group on the Japanese Island of Hokkaido documents additional diversity among sequoioid conifers...