Species described from isolated fossil foliage, fruits, or wood. Some may have been synonymized with other fossil
Prunus species, other fossil genera, or even living species at some point after their description.
Fossil A-C •
P.? acutifolia (Turonian,
Raritan Formation, USA) •
P. aegaea (Early Miocene, Europe-Greenland) •
P. angustiserrata (Middle Pliocene, Europe) •
P. atlantica - Synonym of
P. nanodes •
P. attenuatifolia (Volhynian,
Krivodol Formation, Bulgaria) •
P. aucubaefolia (Oligocene-Miocene, Europe) •
P. barneti (Middle Miocene,
Columbia River Basalts, USA) •
P. calophylla •
P. calvertensis •
P. careyhurstia •
P. cathybrownae (Ypresian,
Klondike Mountain Formation, USA) •
P. cerasiformis •
P. chaneyi (Oligocene,
Creede Formation, USA) •
P. coloradensis •
P. corrugis •
P. coveus •
P. crassa (Middle Pliocene, Saugbagger-Flora, Germany) •
P. dura •
P. echinata (Middle Pliocene, Saugbagger-Flora, Germany) •
P. hanhardtii (Miocene?,
Öhningen, Switzerland)
Fossil J-L •
P. juglandiformis •
P. kenaica •
P. kryshtofovichii •
P. kunmingensis •
P. laeta •
P. langsdorfii (Early Oligocene-Middle Miocene, Europe) •
P. leporimontana •
P. lyoniifolia Fossil M-O •
P. maclearnii •
P. marchica •
P. masoni •
P. masonii •
P. matsumaensis •
P. maxima •
P. mclearni •
P. merriami •
P. microdonta •
P. micropyrenula (mid-late Oligocene,
Rixhöft, Poland) •
P.? staratschini (Eocene?, Spitzbergen) •
P. stewarti (Ypresian,
Green River Formation, USA) •
P. stipitata (Pliocene, Limburg, Netherlands) •
P. wutuensis (Early Eocene,
Wutu Formation, China) •
P. zeuschneri Reclassified Fossil species •
P. askenasyi (Piacenzian, Klärbecken Flora, Germany) -Synonym of
Carya moenana •
P. bilinica (Eocene -Early Oligocene, Europe) -Synonym of
Iodes bilinica (including
Palaeohosiea suleticensis ) •
P. eocenica considered likely an Icacinaceae fruit •
P. theodisca (Miocene, Parschlug coal basin, Austria) -Synonym of
Quercus mediterranea ==References==