- Araucariaceae
Taxobox
name = Araucaria family
image_width = 250px
image_caption =Monkey-puzzle , ("Araucaria araucana")
regnum =Plantae
divisio =Pinophyta
classis = Pinopsida
ordo =Pinales
familia = Araucariaceae
familia_authority = Henkel & W. Hochstetter
subdivision_ranks = Genera
subdivision = "Agathis "
"Araucaria "
"Wollemia "
†"Araucarioxylon "The Araucariaceae are a very ancient family of
conifer s. They achieved maximum diversity in theJurassic andCretaceous periods, when they existed almost worldwide. At the end of the Cretaceous, when dinosaurs became extinct, so too did the Araucariaceae in the northern hemisphere.There are three genera with 41 species alive today, "
Agathis ", "Araucaria " and "Wollemia ", all derived from theAntarctic flora and distributed largely in thesouthern hemisphere . By far the greatest diversity is inNew Caledonia (18 species), with others in southernSouth America ,New Zealand ,Australia andMalesia , where "Agathis" extends a short distance into thenorthern hemisphere , reaching 18°N in thePhilippines . All areevergreen tree s, typically with a single stout trunk and very regular whorls of branches, giving them a formal appearance. Several are very popular ornamental trees ingarden s in subtropical regions, and some are also very importanttimber trees, producingwood of high quality. Several have edible seeds similar topine nut s, and others produce valuableresin andamber . In theforest s where they occur, they are usually dominant trees, often the largest species in the forest; the largest is "Araucaria hunsteinii", reported to 89 m tall inNew Guinea , with several other species reaching 50-65 m tall.The
petrified wood of the famousPetrified Forest east ofHolbrook, Arizona arefossil Araucariaceae. During the Upper (Late) Triassic the region was moist and mild. The trees washed from where they grew in seasonal flooding and accumulated on sandy delta mudflats, where they were buried by silt and periodically by layers of volcanic ash which mineralized the wood. The fossil trees belong generally to three species of Araucariaceae, the most common of them being "Araucarioxylon arizonicum ". Some of the segments of trunk represent giant trees that are estimated to have been over 50 meters tall when they were alive.
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