Giant mushrooms were peppered throughout the planet before trees. These 'shrooms have since shrunk, but we still think they're pretty cool.

Favolaschia calocera
While few of us are actually mycologists–or the super niche-y group of people that study fungi–mushrooms have long captivated the attention of humans, be it through their use in religious ceremonies (some ancient rock art shows what appears to be hallucinogenic mushroom use in the Sahara desert around 9,000 years ago!), childhood books–or just as a catalyst to write some truly bizarre music.
While comparatively diminutive today, there was even a time in which it was mushrooms–and we’re talking massive, 24-feet-tall and three-feet-wide mushrooms–that covered the Earth, not trees. Fast forward 350 to 420 million years, and though these ‘shrooms have shrunk substantially, they still maintain their coolness. We provide you with some of our favorites below:
Cyathus striatus
Hydnellum peckii
Amethyst Deceiver
Leratiomyces mushroom
Panus fasciatus
Amanita muscaria
Mycena chlorophos
Rhodotus palmatus
Crepidotus
Lepiota mushroom
Porcelain Fungus
Puffball Mushroom
An exploding puffball mushroom
Phallus indusiatus
Marasmius haematocephalus
Scutellinia scutellata
Chorioactis
Geastrum minimum
Clathrus archeri
Morchella esculenta
Clathrus ruber
Hairy mycena
A snail perches atop a mushroom.
Aseroe Rubra
Schizophyllum commune
Tiny golden mushrooms
A "toothed" mushroom
Coprinus comatus
A frog in a cup mushroom
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