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・ Banksia Hill Juvenile Detention Centre
・ Banksia hirta
・ Banksia hookeriana
・ Banksia horrida
・ Banksia idiogenes
・ Banksia ilicifolia
・ Banksia incana
・ Banksia insulanemorecincta
・ Banksia integrifolia
・ Banksia integrifolia subsp. compar
・ Banksia integrifolia subsp. integrifolia
・ Banksia integrifolia subsp. monticola
・ Banksia ionthocarpa
・ Banksia ionthocarpa subsp. ionthocarpa
・ Banksia Island
Banksia kingii
・ Banksia kippistiana
・ Banksia laevigata
・ Banksia laevigata subsp. fuscolutea
・ Banksia laevigata subsp. laevigata
・ Banksia lanata
・ Banksia laricina
・ Banksia Latrobe Secondary College
・ Banksia lemanniana
・ Banksia lepidorhiza
・ Banksia leptophylla
・ Banksia leptophylla var. leptophylla
・ Banksia leptophylla var. melletica
・ Banksia lindleyana
・ Banksia littoralis


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Banksia kingii : ウィキペディア英語版
Banksia kingii

''Banksia kingii'' is an extinct species of tree or shrub in the plant genus ''Banksia''. It is known only from fossil leaves and fruiting "cones" found in Late Pleistocene sediment at Melaleuca Inlet in western Tasmania. These were discovered by Deny King in the workings of his tin mine. The leaves and fruiting cones were discovered at different locations, and since the sediment had been removed during mining, the stratigraphy of the fossils is unknown. The sediment from which they were recovered was alluvial, consisting of large, well-rounded fragments of quartz and schist.
The fossil leaves are about 12 centimetres long and one centimetre wide and very thick and robust. They clearly belong to genus ''Banksia'', section ''Banksia'', series ''Salicinae'', but not to any of the extant species in that series. The leaves of ''B. plagiocarpa'' (Dallachy's Banksia) are similar in form, shape and robustness, but differ strongly in structure. Leaves of ''B. saxicola'' (Grampians Banksia) are structurally the most similar to ''B. kingii'', but have a different shape. There also appear to be some affinities with ''B. marginata'' (Silver Banksia) and ''B. canei'' (Mountain Banksia), but insufficient to warrant the fossil's ascription to those species. The fossils are therefore considered representative of a new species, ''B. kingii''.
The fossil fruiting structures are cylindrical, about 6 centimetres high and 4½ centimetres wide. The structure had lost its old flower parts. It appears to be most closely related to ''B. saxicola'' and ''B. canei'', with some similarities to ''B. marginata''. The taxonomic situation therefore appears highly similar for both leaves and fruiting structures, and so the fruiting structures are ascribed to ''B. kingii'' despite the absence of any direct connection to the fossil leaves.
The species is believed to represent an extinct lineage. It is possible that it is an ancestor of ''B. marginata'', although ''B. marginata'' must have speciated well before the extinction of ''B. kingii'', given how widely it is now distributed. Extinction of ''B. kingii'' probably occurred in the late Quaternary, and may have been caused by the climatic and physical disruption of glaciation, or by increased fire frequency due to human activity.
A formal description of ''B. kingii'' was published in 1991 by Gregory J. Jordan and Robert S. Hill, who named the species in honour of the discoverer, Deny King. Hence the species' full name is "''Banksia kingii'' Jordan & Hill". The holotype and a number of other specimens are stored in the Department of Plant Science at the University of Tasmania.
==References==

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抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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