The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition

© 2014 Ngoc Nguyen The shift from the Eocene 'Greenhouse' to Oligocene 'Icehouse' conditions is a globally significant event. The Eocene – Oligocene boundary (33.9 million years ago) marks the onset of permanent large-scale glaciation in Antarctica and the onset of the current gl...

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Main Author: Nguyen, Ngoc
Format: Master Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11343/51066
id ftumelbourne:oai:jupiter.its.unimelb.edu.au:11343/51066
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spelling ftumelbourne:oai:jupiter.its.unimelb.edu.au:11343/51066 2023-05-15T13:55:52+02:00 The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition Nguyen, Ngoc 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11343/51066 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/11343/51066 palaeoecology biostratigraphy Otway Basin Gippsland Basin Eocene Oligocene palynology Masters Research thesis 2014 ftumelbourne 2019-10-15T12:11:48Z © 2014 Ngoc Nguyen The shift from the Eocene 'Greenhouse' to Oligocene 'Icehouse' conditions is a globally significant event. The Eocene – Oligocene boundary (33.9 million years ago) marks the onset of permanent large-scale glaciation in Antarctica and the onset of the current global climatic 'Icehouse‘ state. In the Austral-Antarctic region, the transition is well recorded in deep water marine carbon and oxygen isotopes, however in the terrestrial realm little is known of the nature of environmental change associated with this event. In Australia, this is partly due to a lack of precise methods of dating Paleogene terrestrial strata. The most common practice of dating terrestrial sediments is the application of Gippsland Basin‘s spore-pollen biostratigraphy. This research assessed the applicability of the Gippsland Basin‘s spore-pollen biostratigraphy to the Otway Basin. Results demonstrated Gippsland Basin‘s spore-pollen biostratigraphy provides inaccurate ages when applied to samples from the Otway Basin. In addition, results from pollen analyses combined with foraminifera, dinoflagellate, and calcareous nannofossils and other stratigraphic data were used to create a detailed climate history of this high palaeolatitude region (~60°S). The spore-pollen assemblage indicates the palaeovegetation of the Otway Basin was dominated by Nothofagidites spp., with an abundance of species from the families Myrtaceae, Casuarinaceae and Proteaceae. The Nothofagus-dominated mesothermal rainforest probably had an emergent layer of Podocarpaceae and Araucariaceae species and a diverse understorey of ferns. The palynological record of the Otway Basin shows no vegetation change occurred during the time prior to and across the Eocene-Oligocene boundary even though there is evidence of permanent continental–scale glaciation on Antarctica. Master Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica The University of Melbourne: Digital Repository Antarctic Austral
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Melbourne: Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftumelbourne
language unknown
topic palaeoecology
biostratigraphy
Otway Basin
Gippsland Basin
Eocene
Oligocene
palynology
spellingShingle palaeoecology
biostratigraphy
Otway Basin
Gippsland Basin
Eocene
Oligocene
palynology
Nguyen, Ngoc
The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition
topic_facet palaeoecology
biostratigraphy
Otway Basin
Gippsland Basin
Eocene
Oligocene
palynology
description © 2014 Ngoc Nguyen The shift from the Eocene 'Greenhouse' to Oligocene 'Icehouse' conditions is a globally significant event. The Eocene – Oligocene boundary (33.9 million years ago) marks the onset of permanent large-scale glaciation in Antarctica and the onset of the current global climatic 'Icehouse‘ state. In the Austral-Antarctic region, the transition is well recorded in deep water marine carbon and oxygen isotopes, however in the terrestrial realm little is known of the nature of environmental change associated with this event. In Australia, this is partly due to a lack of precise methods of dating Paleogene terrestrial strata. The most common practice of dating terrestrial sediments is the application of Gippsland Basin‘s spore-pollen biostratigraphy. This research assessed the applicability of the Gippsland Basin‘s spore-pollen biostratigraphy to the Otway Basin. Results demonstrated Gippsland Basin‘s spore-pollen biostratigraphy provides inaccurate ages when applied to samples from the Otway Basin. In addition, results from pollen analyses combined with foraminifera, dinoflagellate, and calcareous nannofossils and other stratigraphic data were used to create a detailed climate history of this high palaeolatitude region (~60°S). The spore-pollen assemblage indicates the palaeovegetation of the Otway Basin was dominated by Nothofagidites spp., with an abundance of species from the families Myrtaceae, Casuarinaceae and Proteaceae. The Nothofagus-dominated mesothermal rainforest probably had an emergent layer of Podocarpaceae and Araucariaceae species and a diverse understorey of ferns. The palynological record of the Otway Basin shows no vegetation change occurred during the time prior to and across the Eocene-Oligocene boundary even though there is evidence of permanent continental–scale glaciation on Antarctica.
format Master Thesis
author Nguyen, Ngoc
author_facet Nguyen, Ngoc
author_sort Nguyen, Ngoc
title The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition
title_short The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition
title_full The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition
title_fullStr The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition
title_full_unstemmed The palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of South-eastern Australia during the Eocene Greenhouse to Oligocene Icehouse transition
title_sort palaeovegetation, palaeoclimate and biostratigraphy of south-eastern australia during the eocene greenhouse to oligocene icehouse transition
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11343/51066
geographic Antarctic
Austral
geographic_facet Antarctic
Austral
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11343/51066
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