The compressed basidiocarp of a fungus belonging to Geasteraceae (Lycoperdales; Gasteromycetes) was recovered from the plant‐bearing Cenozoic strata of the Pié de Vaca Formation, Puebla, Mexico. The fossil specimen consists of an open exoperidium with ten triangular rays, and a central, circular endoperidium with an eccentrical ostiole and irregular surface relief. Scanning electron microscopy revealed a delicate reticulum on the surface of rays and on samples of the endoperidium. An acetolyzed fragment of the endoperidium yielded a few fungal spores, and similar spores were also obtained from an acetolyzed rock fragment adjacent to the fossil specimen. The fossil fungus exhibits the characteristics of extant earthstars; morphological comparison between the extant and the fossil earthstar and the type of spores obtained from the endoperidium of the latter indicate its affinity with Geastrum, although uncertainty in diagnostic characters preclude its assignment to a living species. The report of a complete basidiocarp of Geastrum from the Cenozoic of Puebla may contribute greatly to the knowledge about the spatial distribution and evolutionary history of Geasteraceae and Lycoperdales.
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