New records of plant macrofossils of palms and other groups are evaluated within the framework of the Messinian environment at the newly studied site of Capo di Fiume, Palena, central Italy. Similar palm foliage has been also recovered from the Messinian deposits of Pollenzo near Alba, northern Italy.
The palm leaves were assigned to Phoenicites sp. based only on the leaf morphology. The floristic composition of the Palena plant assemblage shows a relatively high abundance of woody elements typical of a subhumid environment (Tetraclinis, Cupressus, Leguminosae), but also includes common mesic elements (Pinus, Magnolia, Ilex, Berberis, cf.
Trigonobalanopsis, Paliurus, Myrica, Engelhardia), which are known from other Messinian floras of Italy, France and Greece. The affinities of several angiosperm macrofossils including enigmatic inflorescences resembling palms and Butomus, foliage of Dicotylophyllum sp. div. and disseminules of Carpolites sp. div. remain unresolved.
The reconstructed vegetation type is interpreted as coastal non-swampy, wet soil (riparian) vegetation with a high abundance of woody elements growing under warm and semi-arid/sub-humid climatic conditions.