Upper Devonian Plant Microfossils from Eastern and Arctic Canada: Their Taxonomy and Palaeoecological Significance

Plant microfossils are extracted from strata of Upper Devonian age occurring at two previously uninvestigated localities in Eastern Canada and in the Canadian Arctic. The extraction procedure includes a new permanent palynological mounting technique using corn syrup and Permount, a synthetic resin....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brideaux, Wayne Wilfred
Other Authors: Radforth, N.W., Biology
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/16534
Description
Summary:Plant microfossils are extracted from strata of Upper Devonian age occurring at two previously uninvestigated localities in Eastern Canada and in the Canadian Arctic. The extraction procedure includes a new permanent palynological mounting technique using corn syrup and Permount, a synthetic resin. In addition, a method of eliminating by-product in residues after hydrofluoric acid, is also described. A number of miospore and acritarch form species are described and figured; nine new form species of miospores are proposed. The miospore species recovered from both localities indicate a geological age of early Upper Devonian (Frasnian) for the enclosing strata. A new way of assessing qualitative, regional palaeofloristic changes is provided by tabulation of morphological characteristics of individual miospores. The use of miospore species in defining Upper Devonian microfloral provinces and Upper Devonian-Lower Carboniferous migration of parent forms is demonstrated. Thesis Master of Science (MSc)