When the
Cathedral of Magdeburg was under repair during the 1830s, a block of sandstone crashed and split open, revealing a fragment of the stem of
Pleuromeia sternbergi. This was described by
George Graf zu Munster in 1839 as a species of
Sigillaria. Corda later assigned the species to the new genus
Pleuromeya. The sandstone had been mined in a quarry near
Bernburg (Saale) where later on numerous specimens of
Pleuromeia were found, including cones.
P. sternbergi has since been found in other Lower and Middle
Buntsandstein deposits elsewhere in Germany, France and Spain. Other species have been described from several localities in Russia, Australia, South America and Japan.
Pleuromeia is placed in the family
Pleuromeiaceae within the
Isoetales, closely related to
Isoetaceae, the family which contains modern
Isoetes. Around 20 species of
Pleuromeia have been described, predominantly from the Northern Hemisphere, though it is not clear that all of these species are valid. Table of species after Deng et al. 2023. The placement of the species
Pleuromeia dubia from the Early Triassic of Australia in the genus has been questioned, due to its anatomy strongly differing from the typical species of the genus. == Evolutionary history ==