As envisioned, the ATG had a wide distribution when the global climate was much warmer than it is currently, a situation strengthened by the closer position of some of the continents in late Mesozoic to early Cenozic times.3,4 With the onset of global cooling and the Ice Ages, the ranges of these tropical to subtropical species were left in isolated pockets of warmer climates.5
The southern, more tropical equivalent of the ATG was the Neotropical Tertiary Geoflora.6
Footnotes:
^ Delcourt, Hazel, Forests in Peril, (Blacksburg: The McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company, 2002), 31-2.
^ Dougal Dixon et al., The Atlas of Life on Earth, (New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 2001), 334-5.