John William Dawson described the genus in 1871. The name derives from the
ancient Greek (
archaīos, "ancient"), and (
ptéris, "fern").
Archaeopteris was originally classified as a
fern, and it remained classified so for over 100 years. In 1911,
Russian paleontologist
Mikhail Dimitrievich Zalessky described a new type of
petrified wood from the
Donets Basin in modern
Ukraine. He called the wood
Callixylon, though he did not find any structures other than the trunk. The similarity to
conifer wood was recognized. It was also noted that ferns of the genus
Archaeopteris were often found associated with
fossils of
Callixylon. In the 1960s,
paleontologist Charles B. Beck was able to demonstrate that the fossil wood known as
Callixylon and the leaves known as
Archaeopteris were actually part of the same plant. It was a plant with a mixture of characteristics not seen in any living plant, a link between true
gymnosperms and ferns. The genus
Archaeopteris is placed in the
order Archaeopteridales and
family Archaeopteridaceae. The name is similar to that of the first known feathered bird,
Archaeopteryx, but in this case refers to the fern-like nature of the plant's
fronds.
Relationship to spermatophytes Archaeopteris is a member of a group of free-sporing woody plants called the
progymnosperms that are interpreted as distant ancestors of the
gymnosperms.
Archaeopteris reproduced by releasing spores rather than by producing seeds, but some of the species, such as
Archaeopteris halliana were
heterosporous, producing two types of spores. This is thought to represent an early step in the evolution of
vascular plants towards reproduction by seeds, which first appeared in the earliest, long-extinct gymnosperm group, the seed ferns (
Pteridospermatophyta). The
conifers or Pinophyta are one of four divisions of extant gymnosperms that arose from the seed ferns during the Carboniferous period. == Description ==