Fossil leaves were found at the Newvale Mine, Waimumu Coalfield,
Southland District,
South Island,
New Zealand (), in a thin
leaf litter bed located in a seam of the middle
Gore Lignite Measures.
B. novae-zelandiae was first published in 2010. The specific epithet refers to
New Zealand, where the fossils were found. The fossils are assigned to
Banksieae based on several structural grounds, including brachyparacytic stomata, a trichome base architecture unique to Banksieae, "banksioid"
venation, and the pinnate leaf lobes. Within Banksieae they are assigned to genus
Banksia because of their cuticular papillae and the division of the leaves into triangular lobes all the way back to the midrib, neither of which occurs in any other Banksieae genus. (Before the 2007 transfer of
Dryandra into
Banksia, it was realised that there was no way to distinguish these two genera based solely on foliar characters, and so fossil leaves were classified into the
form genera Banksieaephyllum and
Banksieaeformis. Now, however, they may simply be assigned to
Banksia.) Although the cuticular papillae are regarded as evidence that the species belongs to
Banksia, their unusual structure, together with some ornamentation of the trichome bases, and the absence of any features of extant
Banksia recognised as derived, suggests that
B. novae-zelandiae is basal to all extant
Banksia species; that is, it belongs to the
stem group of
Banksia. ==Habitat==