Mid-Cretaceous floras and climate of the Russian high Arctic (Novosibirsk Islands, Northern Yakutiya)

Two mid-Cretaceous floras collected in terrigenous and volcaniclastic deposits of the Novosibirsk Islands in the Russian high Arctic were studied. These floras are the most poleward mid-Cretaceous floras known and existed at palaeolatitudes up to 82-85 °N. These represent our best insight into polar...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Main Authors: Herman, Alexei B., Spicer, Robert A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
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Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/20870/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2010.02.034
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Summary:Two mid-Cretaceous floras collected in terrigenous and volcaniclastic deposits of the Novosibirsk Islands in the Russian high Arctic were studied. These floras are the most poleward mid-Cretaceous floras known and existed at palaeolatitudes up to 82-85 °N. These represent our best insight into polar conditions at one of the warmest intervals in Earth history. An Albian flora from the Balyktakh Formation of the Kotel'nyi Island comprises 40 species of ferns, bennettites, cycadophytes, ginkgoaleans, czekanowskialeans, conifers and gymnosperms incertae sedis. This flora is most similar to the Albian Buor-kemuss Flora widespread in the Arctic Siberia and Alaska and, to a lesser extent, to the Aptian Silyap Flora of Siberia. A Turonian flora from the Derevyannye Gory Formation in the Novaya Sibir’ Island includes approximately 50 taxa of ferns, ginkgoaleans, conifers and angiosperms. This flora exhibits plants common for the early Cretaceous as well as taxa typical for Cenomanian - Senonian, which implies that the age of the plant-bearing deposits is likely to be Turonian. The Cretaceous climate has often been described as ‘warm’ with a higher degree of equability than today with the near-polar regions in particular being much warmer than today. Our estimates using CLAMP and a new global gridded climate calibration demonstrate that for the Turonian Novaya Sibir’ Flora plant physiognomy reflects a humid climate with warm summers and mild frost-free winters: the mean annual temperature is estimated to have been + 9.2 ± 2.2 °C, the warm month mean temperature + 17.2 ± 2.8 °C, the cold month mean temperature + 1.1 ± 3.8 °C and the mean growing season precipitation 537 ± 392 mm. These temperature parameters indicate that within 900 km of the Turonian North Pole the climate was similar to that of modern temperate, or even warm-temperate, zones but must have differed considerably in having pronounced high-latitude sunlight seasonality. The ecology of the late Cretaceous Arctic plants reflects their adaptation to this ...