Who I was, covered up in leaves
My mother heard on the radio this afternoon that butterfly fossils prove that the proboscis evolved a full geologic period before flowering plants did.
Me: "So what were they eating with them?"
My mother: "Aha!"
(She's suspecting carrion.)
Me: "So what were they eating with them?"
My mother: "Aha!"
(She's suspecting carrion.)

Thanks for the additional information!
I can see that. I just also see my mother's point that if you need liquid sources of nutrition, salts, minerals, etc., you could do a lot worse than damply decaying animal matter.
Meanwhile, Scientific American also has people saying "maybe not" about significant ancient diversification of Lepidoptera, but it's not clear whether they mean "no, you're trying to get too much from a few fossil scales" or "yes, these three lineages go back to the end of the Triassic, but that doesn't mean there were lots of moths and butterflies flying around the early Jurassic landscape."
Well, since I didn't even know butterfly fossils were a thing before yesterday, I look forward to seeing how the debate evolves.