See more from this Division: Topical Sessions
See more from this Session: Ancient Polar Ecosystems and Environments: Proxies for Understanding Climate Change and Global Warming
Abstract:
Metasequoia-dominated communities including members of the Ginkgoales are preserved as impressions among coarse-grained fluvial-alluvial deposits possibly interpreted as upland or proximal depositional settings. Assemblages dominated by members of the Equisetales are often preserved three dimensionally and in association with freshwater bivalves and gastropods in finer-grained deposits that are interpreted as relatively lowland and distal lacustrine settings. Transitional ecotones with an abundant and more diverse set of leaf morphotypes as well as permineralized wood remains typify siltstones and sandstones in channel, floodplain, and crevass-splay facies at varied study sites in the Cantwell Basin. Preliminary collections of these floral elements include the cycad Nilssonia, Cladophlebis fern foliage, the monocot Sparganium, and the dicot genera Grewiopsis, Viburnum, Planera, Cocculus, Dicotylophyllum, Pseudoprotophyllum, and Menispermites among others. Wood remains are of the conifer genus Metasequoia and show stark growth rings with abrupt early to late wood transition and very few false rings.
Leaf margin and leaf size analyses of all dicot foliage collected at all newly sampled localities indicate temperate biome conditions with warmer than present mean annual temperatures. By coupling the paleobotanical record of the lower Cantwell Formation with the ichno- and body fossil faunal record, a more complete glimpse into Late Cretaceous ecosystems at mid- to high-latitudes is possible.
See more from this Division: Topical Sessions
See more from this Session: Ancient Polar Ecosystems and Environments: Proxies for Understanding Climate Change and Global Warming