Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole
The Chatham Islands, New Zealand, provide a unique perspective of the polar forest biome during the mid-Cretaceous global greenhouse (palaeolatitude ~ 70–80° S), when eastern Zealandia was attached to the West Antarctica sector of Gondwana. The palynological assemblage supports a Cenomanian-Turonian...
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ftmonashunicris:oai:monash.edu:publications/624e8177-0b63-413f-abef-2d98beef7769 2023-05-15T14:07:42+02:00 Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole Mays, Chris Stilwell, Jeffrey 2014 application/pdf https://research.monash.edu/en/publications/624e8177-0b63-413f-abef-2d98beef7769 https://researchmgt.monash.edu/ws/files/243537855/243536264_oa.pdf http://www.ipa-assoc.org/docs/Abstract-Volume-IPC4.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Mays , C & Stilwell , J 2014 , ' Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’ : a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole ' , International Palaentological Congress (IPC 2014) , Mendoza , Argentina , 28/09/14 - 3/10/14 pp. 205-205 . < http://www.ipa-assoc.org/docs/Abstract-Volume-IPC4.pdf > conferenceObject 2014 ftmonashunicris 2021-12-26T12:12:38Z The Chatham Islands, New Zealand, provide a unique perspective of the polar forest biome during the mid-Cretaceous global greenhouse (palaeolatitude ~ 70–80° S), when eastern Zealandia was attached to the West Antarctica sector of Gondwana. The palynological assemblage supports a Cenomanian-Turonian (~ 98–90 Ma) age for the ~ 400 m thick succession. The examined lithostratigraphic unit, the Tupuangi Formation, was deposited in a fluviodeltaic system; lithological and palaeopedological evidences suggest that the local depositional environments associated with the macrofloral remains were deltaic floodplains. Diverse macrofloral fossil assemblages were found on numerous hydromorphic palaeosol horizons, often associated with well-established root systems and in situ trunks, or entrained in overlying fine sandstone facies. This macroflora consisted of prevalent conifers, locally abundant angiosperms and ginkgos (Ginkgoites), and uncommon free sporing plants, including non-vascular plants (marchantiophytes and bryophytes), herbaceous lycopsids and ferns (Adiantites, Cladophlebis and Sphenopteris). The fern leaf and spore assemblage comprised a lower diversity and abundance than coeval localities of the Southern Hemisphere, including eastern Australia, the Antarctic Peninsula and mainland New Zealand. Quantitative microfloral data reveal intermittent overabundances of monospecific fern spores, but these were likely caused by the localised re-establishment of riparian fern taxa after disturbance of the floodplain environment. In contrast to the relatively depauperate fern component, the high conifer pollen diversity and abundance is unparalleled for mid-Cretaceous assemblages of the Southern Hemisphere, and consists almost exclusively of Araucariaceae, Cupressaceae and Podocarpaceae. The conifer-dominated assemblage is likely due to the relatively cooler, drier climate associated with the extremely high palaeolatitude. Furthermore, the palynology hints at a previously unreported microfloral subprovince, characterised ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica South pole South pole West Antarctica Monash University Research Portal Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula New Zealand South Pole The Antarctic West Antarctica |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Monash University Research Portal |
op_collection_id |
ftmonashunicris |
language |
English |
description |
The Chatham Islands, New Zealand, provide a unique perspective of the polar forest biome during the mid-Cretaceous global greenhouse (palaeolatitude ~ 70–80° S), when eastern Zealandia was attached to the West Antarctica sector of Gondwana. The palynological assemblage supports a Cenomanian-Turonian (~ 98–90 Ma) age for the ~ 400 m thick succession. The examined lithostratigraphic unit, the Tupuangi Formation, was deposited in a fluviodeltaic system; lithological and palaeopedological evidences suggest that the local depositional environments associated with the macrofloral remains were deltaic floodplains. Diverse macrofloral fossil assemblages were found on numerous hydromorphic palaeosol horizons, often associated with well-established root systems and in situ trunks, or entrained in overlying fine sandstone facies. This macroflora consisted of prevalent conifers, locally abundant angiosperms and ginkgos (Ginkgoites), and uncommon free sporing plants, including non-vascular plants (marchantiophytes and bryophytes), herbaceous lycopsids and ferns (Adiantites, Cladophlebis and Sphenopteris). The fern leaf and spore assemblage comprised a lower diversity and abundance than coeval localities of the Southern Hemisphere, including eastern Australia, the Antarctic Peninsula and mainland New Zealand. Quantitative microfloral data reveal intermittent overabundances of monospecific fern spores, but these were likely caused by the localised re-establishment of riparian fern taxa after disturbance of the floodplain environment. In contrast to the relatively depauperate fern component, the high conifer pollen diversity and abundance is unparalleled for mid-Cretaceous assemblages of the Southern Hemisphere, and consists almost exclusively of Araucariaceae, Cupressaceae and Podocarpaceae. The conifer-dominated assemblage is likely due to the relatively cooler, drier climate associated with the extremely high palaeolatitude. Furthermore, the palynology hints at a previously unreported microfloral subprovince, characterised ... |
format |
Conference Object |
author |
Mays, Chris Stilwell, Jeffrey |
spellingShingle |
Mays, Chris Stilwell, Jeffrey Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole |
author_facet |
Mays, Chris Stilwell, Jeffrey |
author_sort |
Mays, Chris |
title |
Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole |
title_short |
Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole |
title_full |
Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole |
title_fullStr |
Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole |
title_full_unstemmed |
Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole |
title_sort |
fossil flora of the chatham islands, eastern ‘zealandia’:a window into the forest biome of the mid-cretaceous south pole |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
https://research.monash.edu/en/publications/624e8177-0b63-413f-abef-2d98beef7769 https://researchmgt.monash.edu/ws/files/243537855/243536264_oa.pdf http://www.ipa-assoc.org/docs/Abstract-Volume-IPC4.pdf |
geographic |
Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula New Zealand South Pole The Antarctic West Antarctica |
geographic_facet |
Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula New Zealand South Pole The Antarctic West Antarctica |
genre |
Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica South pole South pole West Antarctica |
genre_facet |
Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Antarctica South pole South pole West Antarctica |
op_source |
Mays , C & Stilwell , J 2014 , ' Fossil flora of the Chatham Islands, eastern ‘Zealandia’ : a window into the forest biome of the mid-Cretaceous south pole ' , International Palaentological Congress (IPC 2014) , Mendoza , Argentina , 28/09/14 - 3/10/14 pp. 205-205 . < http://www.ipa-assoc.org/docs/Abstract-Volume-IPC4.pdf > |
op_rights |
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
_version_ |
1766279719937900544 |