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  Modern tropical analogs for Carboniferous standing forests: Comparison of extinct Mesocalamites with extant Montrichardia
 
 
Titel: Modern tropical analogs for Carboniferous standing forests: Comparison of extinct Mesocalamites with extant Montrichardia
Auteur: Pfefferkorn, Herman W.
Archer, Allen W.
Zodrow, Erwin L.
Verschenen in: Historical biology
Paginering: Jaargang 15 (2001) nr. 3 pagina's 235-250
Jaar: 2001
Inhoud: Assemblages of in situ upright stem casts, or fossil standing forests, provide information on the composition and spatial arrangement of the original plant communities they record, with minimal taphonomic bias. Stands of calamites and lycopsids are found repeatedly as fossil forests in the Late Carboniferous, while other major groups of plants are only rarely preserved in this way. The Carboniferous coal measures of Europe and North America were formed in low-latitude, tropical environments. The ancient plant communities of these settings can be interpreted by comparison of their taxa with specific, modern tropical analogs. Here, ancient standing forests of the extinct sphenopsid Mesocalamites suckowii are compared with modern stands of the monocot Montrichardia arborescens. These modern analogs occur in the Orinoco Delta of Venezuela and the mouth of the Amazon. Montrichardia and its ancient counterparts occur in comparable clastic facies of fluvio-deltaic and estuarine depositional systems. Although Mesocalamites and Montrichardia are very different anatomically and taxonomically, they exhibit some intriguing morphological similarities that can be linked to a common ecology. These modern and ancient taxa have evolved convergent forms of vegetative propagation that enable the plants to colonize and survive in environments characterized by very high rates of sedimentation, or episodic sedimentation events. Such environments have an unusually high potential to preserve standing forests.
Uitgever: Taylor & Francis
Bronbestand: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

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