Little Club Moss -

: These plants dominated prehistoric swamps alongside giant dragonflies.

Have you ever been on a woodland hike and spotted what looked like a miniature pine forest barely an inch off the ground? You likely encountered (often a member of the Selaginella or Lycopodium genera). Despite their name, these "tiny trees" aren't actually mosses at all—they are ancient vascular plants more closely related to ferns. 1. A Living Fossil from the Coal Age little club moss

One of the most fascinating aspects of club moss is its "Lycopodium powder"—the dry, yellow spores produced in its club-like tips. Club Mosses and their Mighty Ancestors : These plants dominated prehistoric swamps alongside giant

The Tiny Giants Under Your Feet: A Guide to Little Club Moss Despite their name, these "tiny trees" aren't actually

: When these ancient giants died, they were compressed over millions of years to form the coal deposits we mine today.

Little club moss is a survivor from a truly alien era of Earth's history. Over 300 million years ago, during the Carboniferous Period, its ancestors weren't just ground cover—they were reaching heights of over 100 feet.