The oldest known
fossils of flowering plants are fossil mesangiosperms from the
Hauterivian stage of the
Cretaceous period.
Molecular clock comparisons of DNA sequences indicate that the mesangiosperms originated between 140 and 150
Mya (million years ago) near the beginning of the Cretaceous period. This was about 25
Ma (million years) after the origin of the angiosperms in the mid-
Jurassic. By 135Mya, the mesangiosperms had
radiated into 5 groups:
Chloranthales,
Magnoliids,
Monocots,
Ceratophyllales, and
Eudicots. These studies agreed on the most likely phylogeny for the mesangiosperms. In this phylogeny, the monocots are
sister to the clade [Ceratophyllales + eudicots]. However, this result is not strongly supported. The approximately unbiased topology
test showed that some of the other possible positions of the monocots had more than 5% probability of being correct. The major weakness of these 2 studies was the small number of species whose DNA was being used in the phylogenetic analysis, 45 in one study and 64 in the other. This was unavoidable, because
complete chloroplast genome sequences are known for only a few plants. == References ==