Acer traini is represented by a group of fossil specimens from a number of different geologic deposits in western North America. The northernmost fossils have been reported from the
Early Miocene Chilcotin River flora of Central
British Columbia. Two localities in
Oregon have produced fossils of the species. The White Hills site of the Mascall Formation in Northeast Central Oregon and the Trout Creek flora of southeastern Oregon while the Trapper Creek flora found in southern central
Idaho is the furthest east locality for the species. Two Early to early Middle Miocene floras in Nevada host
A. traini fossils, the Thurston Ranch flora of northeastern Nevada and the southernmost occurrence of the species in the Purple Mountain flora in western central Nevada. The Chilcotin River flora found in preserved infilled paleovalleys overlain by
Chilcotin Group flood basalts while the Mascall formation is composed of temporary lake beds interbedded with lava flows of the
Columbia River Basalt Group. Only one fossil is known from each locality, with the exception of the Trout Creek flora which produced two fossils, giving a total of only seven specimens. The holotype specimen of the species is number UMMP 65138, housed in the
University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and the paratype is specimen UCMP 9343, in the
University of California Museum of Paleontology. The specimens were studied by
paleobotanists
Jack A. Wolfe of the
United States Geological Survey, Denver office and Toshimasa Tanai of
Hokkaido University. Wolfe and Tanai published their 1987
type description for
A. traini in the
Journal of the Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University. The
etymology of the chosen
specific name traini is in recognition of Percy Train, a fossil collector who amassed large collections of fossils from the Trout Creek flora. ==Description==