The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada

The Lower Cretaceous Gates Formation (late Early Albian) of western Canada is a sequence of paralic coal-bearing strata composed of siltstone, sandstone and coal. Macrofossil plants are abundant in the Gates Formation; most fossils are impressions; others include casts and molds of tree trunks. No p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wan, Zhihui
Other Authors: Basinger, James F.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10202004-235747
id ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-10202004-235747
record_format openpolar
spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-10202004-235747 2024-06-02T07:56:52+00:00 The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada Wan, Zhihui Basinger, James F. January 1996 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10202004-235747 en_US eng http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10202004-235747 text Thesis 1996 ftusaskatchewan 2024-05-06T10:47:24Z The Lower Cretaceous Gates Formation (late Early Albian) of western Canada is a sequence of paralic coal-bearing strata composed of siltstone, sandstone and coal. Macrofossil plants are abundant in the Gates Formation; most fossils are impressions; others include casts and molds of tree trunks. No permineralized fossils are found. The Gates flora consists of bryophytes (Marchantiolites and Thallites), Equisetites, ferns (Gleichenites, Acanthopteris and Coniopteris of Dicksoniaceae, Cladophlebis, Sphenopteris and a new genus), seed-ferns (Sagenopteris and a new genus), conifers (Pityocladus and Pityophyllum of Pinaceae, Athrotaxites and Elatides of Taxodiaceae, Elatocladus), cycads (Chilinia, Ctenis, Pseudocycas and Pterophyllum and two new genera), Gingko and Ginkgoites; leptostrobans (a new genus), Taeniopteris and unidentified angiosperms. In total, 52 species from 28 genera are described, including 5 new genera, 15 new species and 3 new combinations. Most plants of the Gates flora appears to have been deciduous. Only Elatides curvifolia and Elatocladus manchurica are convincingly evergreen. The interpreted paleoclimate based on the Gates flora is strongly seasonal with winter minimum temperature possibly below $-$15°C. Rainfall appears to have been abundant since coal deposits are common in the Gates Formation. Although low winter minimum temperature appears to be the main factor causing deciduousness of the Gates flora, low winter light levels may have also contributed to the deciduousness of the Gates flora, as the paleolatitude of the study area was situated at 50°-60° N. Three Early Cretaceous floral provinces are recognized: the Arctic Province, which lacks Cheirolepidiaceae; the Equatorial Province, which has Cheirolepidiaceae; and the Antarctic Province, which also lacks Cheirolepidiaceae. Floras similar to the Gates flora have been reported from throughout the Arctic Province, including Montana, the western Interior of Canada, the Bowser Basin of northwestern Canada, Alaska, western Greenland, ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Arctic Greenland Alaska University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Antarctic Arctic Bowser ENVELOPE(-155.600,-155.600,-86.050,-86.050) Canada Greenland The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language English
description The Lower Cretaceous Gates Formation (late Early Albian) of western Canada is a sequence of paralic coal-bearing strata composed of siltstone, sandstone and coal. Macrofossil plants are abundant in the Gates Formation; most fossils are impressions; others include casts and molds of tree trunks. No permineralized fossils are found. The Gates flora consists of bryophytes (Marchantiolites and Thallites), Equisetites, ferns (Gleichenites, Acanthopteris and Coniopteris of Dicksoniaceae, Cladophlebis, Sphenopteris and a new genus), seed-ferns (Sagenopteris and a new genus), conifers (Pityocladus and Pityophyllum of Pinaceae, Athrotaxites and Elatides of Taxodiaceae, Elatocladus), cycads (Chilinia, Ctenis, Pseudocycas and Pterophyllum and two new genera), Gingko and Ginkgoites; leptostrobans (a new genus), Taeniopteris and unidentified angiosperms. In total, 52 species from 28 genera are described, including 5 new genera, 15 new species and 3 new combinations. Most plants of the Gates flora appears to have been deciduous. Only Elatides curvifolia and Elatocladus manchurica are convincingly evergreen. The interpreted paleoclimate based on the Gates flora is strongly seasonal with winter minimum temperature possibly below $-$15°C. Rainfall appears to have been abundant since coal deposits are common in the Gates Formation. Although low winter minimum temperature appears to be the main factor causing deciduousness of the Gates flora, low winter light levels may have also contributed to the deciduousness of the Gates flora, as the paleolatitude of the study area was situated at 50°-60° N. Three Early Cretaceous floral provinces are recognized: the Arctic Province, which lacks Cheirolepidiaceae; the Equatorial Province, which has Cheirolepidiaceae; and the Antarctic Province, which also lacks Cheirolepidiaceae. Floras similar to the Gates flora have been reported from throughout the Arctic Province, including Montana, the western Interior of Canada, the Bowser Basin of northwestern Canada, Alaska, western Greenland, ...
author2 Basinger, James F.
format Thesis
author Wan, Zhihui
spellingShingle Wan, Zhihui
The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada
author_facet Wan, Zhihui
author_sort Wan, Zhihui
title The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada
title_short The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada
title_full The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada
title_fullStr The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada
title_full_unstemmed The lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western Canada
title_sort lower cretaceous flora of the gates formation from western canada
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10202004-235747
long_lat ENVELOPE(-155.600,-155.600,-86.050,-86.050)
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
Bowser
Canada
Greenland
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
Bowser
Canada
Greenland
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Greenland
Alaska
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Greenland
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-10202004-235747
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