“…This pollen morphogenus can be traced to the Late Cretaceous (Turonian; see Macphail et al., ; Macphail and Carpenter, ) but is especially common, and occasionally dominant, at Paleocene to Middle Miocene localities from Australia (Chambers et al., ; Macphail et al., ). Isolated Dilwynites pollen was recently reported from South America for the first time, from the Eocene Ligorio Márquez Formation in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina (Macphail et al., ). After the discovery in New South Wales of Wollemia nobilis (Jones et al., ), whose pollen type is extremely similar to fossil examples of Dilwynites , the fossil history of Wollemia was accordingly thought to trace back to the Turonian (see Chambers et al., ).…”