The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance

Fossil plant remains are preserved within the deposits of the Eocene Aspelintoppen Formation on Svalbard. These sediments form the youngest continental deposits of early Paleogene age. The Aspelintoppen Formation sediments represent crevasse splay, backswamp and ephemeral lake deposits that represen...

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Main Author: Clifton , Abigail Joy
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Leeds 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/1/589040.pdf
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spelling ftwhiterose:oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:21133 2023-05-15T14:55:45+02:00 The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance Clifton , Abigail Joy 2012-09 text https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/ https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/1/589040.pdf en eng University of Leeds https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/1/589040.pdf Clifton , Abigail Joy (2012) The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance. PhD thesis, University of Leeds. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2012 ftwhiterose 2023-01-30T21:25:29Z Fossil plant remains are preserved within the deposits of the Eocene Aspelintoppen Formation on Svalbard. These sediments form the youngest continental deposits of early Paleogene age. The Aspelintoppen Formation sediments represent crevasse splay, backswamp and ephemeral lake deposits that represent a broad lowland floodplain that was subject to frequent flooding. The forests grew at a palaeolatitude of 75°N. New collections (1032 specimens) ofthe Aspelintoppen Formation flora are dominated by angiosperms including the Fagaceae? (Ushia olafsenii), Betulaceae (Corylites and Craspedodromophyllum), Hamamelidaceae (Platimelis pterospermoides), Platanaceae (Platimeliphyllum and Platanus), Ulmaceae (Ulmites ulmifolius), Trochodendraceae (Zizyphoides flabella), Cercidiphyllaceae Trochodendroides), Juglandaceae (Juglans laurifolia) and Hippocastinaceae (Aesculus longipedunculus). In addition, conifer fossils include Metasequoia shoots and cones, as well as Thuja shoots. Fern fronds of Osmunda and Coniopteris are present, along with the horsetail Equisetum. The Aspelintoppen Formation vegetation grew locally on the floodplain with angiosperms dominating the riparian environment and a mixed angiosperm Metasequoia-dominated flora in the backswamp environment, with Equisetum and ferns occupying the margins of ephemeral lakes and post-disturbance environments. The Aspelintoppen Formation flora is similar in composition and ecology to other early Paleogene Arctic floras from the Canadian Arctic, Greenland, Alaska and north-east Russia, showing that Polar Broadleaved Deciduous Forests were a dominant part of the Arctic environment. Palaeoclimate estimates were derived from the 22 angiosperm morphotypes using both physiognomic and nearest living relative methods. CLAMP results are considered to be the most reliable and indicate that the Eocene climate of Svalbard was temperate with a mean annual temperature of 11.6°C, a warm month mean of 18.rC and a cold month mean of 4.5°C. Precipitation estimates indicate high levels of ... Thesis Arctic Greenland Svalbard Alaska White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York) Arctic Aspelintoppen ENVELOPE(16.750,16.750,77.767,77.767) Greenland Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York)
op_collection_id ftwhiterose
language English
description Fossil plant remains are preserved within the deposits of the Eocene Aspelintoppen Formation on Svalbard. These sediments form the youngest continental deposits of early Paleogene age. The Aspelintoppen Formation sediments represent crevasse splay, backswamp and ephemeral lake deposits that represent a broad lowland floodplain that was subject to frequent flooding. The forests grew at a palaeolatitude of 75°N. New collections (1032 specimens) ofthe Aspelintoppen Formation flora are dominated by angiosperms including the Fagaceae? (Ushia olafsenii), Betulaceae (Corylites and Craspedodromophyllum), Hamamelidaceae (Platimelis pterospermoides), Platanaceae (Platimeliphyllum and Platanus), Ulmaceae (Ulmites ulmifolius), Trochodendraceae (Zizyphoides flabella), Cercidiphyllaceae Trochodendroides), Juglandaceae (Juglans laurifolia) and Hippocastinaceae (Aesculus longipedunculus). In addition, conifer fossils include Metasequoia shoots and cones, as well as Thuja shoots. Fern fronds of Osmunda and Coniopteris are present, along with the horsetail Equisetum. The Aspelintoppen Formation vegetation grew locally on the floodplain with angiosperms dominating the riparian environment and a mixed angiosperm Metasequoia-dominated flora in the backswamp environment, with Equisetum and ferns occupying the margins of ephemeral lakes and post-disturbance environments. The Aspelintoppen Formation flora is similar in composition and ecology to other early Paleogene Arctic floras from the Canadian Arctic, Greenland, Alaska and north-east Russia, showing that Polar Broadleaved Deciduous Forests were a dominant part of the Arctic environment. Palaeoclimate estimates were derived from the 22 angiosperm morphotypes using both physiognomic and nearest living relative methods. CLAMP results are considered to be the most reliable and indicate that the Eocene climate of Svalbard was temperate with a mean annual temperature of 11.6°C, a warm month mean of 18.rC and a cold month mean of 4.5°C. Precipitation estimates indicate high levels of ...
format Thesis
author Clifton , Abigail Joy
spellingShingle Clifton , Abigail Joy
The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance
author_facet Clifton , Abigail Joy
author_sort Clifton , Abigail Joy
title The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance
title_short The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance
title_full The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance
title_fullStr The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance
title_full_unstemmed The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance
title_sort eocene flora of svalbard and its climatic significance
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2012
url https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/1/589040.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(16.750,16.750,77.767,77.767)
geographic Arctic
Aspelintoppen
Greenland
Svalbard
geographic_facet Arctic
Aspelintoppen
Greenland
Svalbard
genre Arctic
Greenland
Svalbard
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Greenland
Svalbard
Alaska
op_relation https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/21133/1/589040.pdf
Clifton , Abigail Joy (2012) The eocene flora of Svalbard and its climatic significance. PhD thesis, University of Leeds.
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