Abstract
The morphology of pollen tetrads and viscin threads is described in fossil Ericaceae pollen from various Eocene/Oligocene/Miocene localities in Europe (Germany, Austria), North America (eastern U.S.A.), and Asia (eastern China). The typical characters of the tetrad configuration, the exine ornamentation and sculpturing, and especially the viscin thread morphology are extremely similar to or even indistinguishable from that in extant members of Rhododendron. All these pollen morphological features strongly suggest that all the investigated material can be assigned to a modern taxon of the Ericaceae: either to Rhododendroideae or even to Rhododendron itself.