Kew scientists find daisy fossils from dinosaur times

Fossil pollen grains from the Asteraceae or daisy family have been discovered in Antarctica by scientists from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and colleagues in Argentina and New Zealand, drastically pushing back the assumed origin of this flowering plant lineage by twenty million years.

by Jonathan Tilley

Sign in to continue

Sign in

Trouble signing in?

Reset password: Click here

Email: hwsupport@haymarket.com

Call: 020 8267 8121

Take a 30-day trial

  • Join Horticulture Week now and pay nothing for your first 30-days.

Register

Subscribe
From £105

  • Full access to hortweek.com
  • Monthly print issues
  • Keep track of competitors, market trends, and policy changes with sector-specific email bulletins
  • Live email alerts from the pest and disease tracker 
  • New project leads and business prospects every week through the landscape leads service
  • Bespoke multi-user packages are available

Subscribe

Need to activate your subscription?
 
Already a subscriber
If you haven't already, activate your subscription here>>
 
Company Domain Access
If your company or university has a corporate subscription simply register your email address here to gain access