Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T22:49:40.390Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Time resolution and the study of Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary megafloras

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 July 2017

Kirk R. Johnson*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, Denver Museum of Natural History, Denver, CO 80205

Extract

In this paper, I discuss issues of time resolution and time-averaging in fossil megafloras from Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) to Oligocene age. The sites are predominantly from North America with some examples from other continents. The purpose of this paper is to explicate the methods used to resolve the age and duration of fossil floras and to discuss the uncertainties associated with these methods. The age of floras is most important for their evolutionary, paleoclimatic and paleoaltitudinal applications, while the duration of floras (here defined as the time represented by individual assemblages, florules, or quarries) is critical for paleoecological and paleoenvironmental applications. Levels of time resolution of both the age and the duration of fossil floras are subject to time-averaging. Behrensmeyer et al. (1992, p. 75) have defined two types of time-averaging: analytical time-averaging which is artificial and results from techniques of analysis and taphonomic time-averaging which is natural and results from the taphonomic history of the assemblage.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1993 Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Axelrod, D. I. and Bailey, H. P. 1969. Paleotemperature analysis of Tertiary floras. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, and Palaeoecology, 6:163195.Google Scholar
Basinger, J. F. 1991. The fossil forests of the Buchanan Lake Formation (Early Tertiary), Axel Heiberg Island, Canadian Arctic Archipelago: preliminary floristics and paleoclimate, p. 3966. In Christie, R. L. and McMillan, N. J. (eds.), Tertiary Fossil Forests of the Geodetic Hills Axel Heiberg Island, Arctic Archipelago. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 403.Google Scholar
Behrensmeyer, A. K. 1983. Resolving time in paleobiology. Paleobiology, 9:18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Behrensmeyer, A. K., Damuth, J. D., Dimichele, W. A., Potts, R., Sues, H. D., and Wing, S. L. (eds.). 1992. Terrestrial ecosystems through time. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 568p.Google Scholar
Boulter, M. C. and Kvacek, Z. 1989. The Palaeocene flora of the Isle of Mull. The Palaeontological Association Special Papers in Palaeontology, 42:1149.Google Scholar
Brown, R. W. 1962. Paleocene flora of the Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper, 375:119p.Google Scholar
Burnham, R. J. 1989. Relationships between standing vegetation and leaf litter in a paratropical forest: implications for paleobotany. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 58:532.Google Scholar
Burnham, R. J., Wing, S. L., and Parker, G. G. 1992. The reflection of deciduous forest communities in leaf litter: implications for autochthonous litter assemblages from the fossil record. Paleobiology, 18:3049.Google Scholar
Butler, R. F., Gingerich, P. D., and Lindsay, E. H. 1981. Magnetic polarity stratigraphy and biostratigraphy of Paleocene and Lower Eocene continental deposits, Clark's Fork Basin, Wyoming. Journal of Geology, 89:299316.Google Scholar
Christophel, D. C. and Johnson, K. R. 1990. The effect of mosaic rainforest distribution and taphonomy on the physiognomy of modern leaf deposits: implications for Cretaceous and Paleogene paleoclimatic reconstructions. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Program, 22:35.Google Scholar
Christophel, D. C., Scriven, L. J., and Greenwood, D. R. 1992. An Eocene megafossil flora from Nelly Creek, South Australia. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, 116:6576.Google Scholar
Crabtree, D. R. 1987. The early Campanian flora of the Two Medicine Formation, northcentral Montana. Unpubl. , University of Montana, 329p.Google Scholar
Crane, P. R., Manchester, S. R., and Dilcher, D. L. 1990. A preliminary survey of fossil leaves and well-preserved reproductive structures from the Sentinel Butte Formation (Paleocene) near Almont, North Dakota. Fieldiana: Geology, 20:163.Google Scholar
Daniel, I. L. 1989. Taxonomic investigation of elements from the early Cretaceous megaflora from the middle Clarence valley, New Zealand. , University of Canterbury, 256p.Google Scholar
Dingus, L. 1984. Effects of stratigraphic completeness on interpretations of extinction rates across the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. Paleobiology, 10:420438.Google Scholar
Dingus, L., and Sadler, P. M. 1982. The effects of stratigraphic completeness on estimates of evolutionary rates. Systematic Zoology, 31:400412.Google Scholar
Dorf, E. 1940. Relationship between floras of the type Lance and Fort Union Formations. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 51:213236.Google Scholar
Evernden, J. F. and James, G. T. 1964. Potassium-argon dates and the Tertiary floras of North America. American Journal of Science, 262:9454–974.Google Scholar
Farley, M. B. 1990. Vegetation distribution across the early Eocene depositional landscape from palynological analysis. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, and Palaecology, 79:1127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gastaldo, R. A., Douglass, D. P., and McCarroll, S. M. 1987. Origin, characteristics, and provenance of plant macrodetritus in a Holocene crevasse splay, Mobile Delta, Alabama. Palaios, 2:229240.Google Scholar
Gastaldo, R. A., Bearce, S. C., Degges, C. D., Hunt, R. J., Pebbles, M. W., and Violette, D. L. 1989. Biostratinomy of a Holocene oxbow lake: a backswamp to mid-channel transect. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 58:4759.Google Scholar
Gill, J. R. and Cobban, W. A. 1966. The Red Bird Section of the Upper Cretaceous Pierre Shale, in Wyoming, with a section on a new Echinoid from the Cretaceous Pierre Shale of eastern Wyoming, by Kier, P. M. U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper, 393-A:73p.Google Scholar
Grande, L. 1984. Paleontology of the Green River Formation, with a review of the fish fauna. Geological Survey of Wyoming Bulletin, 52:1333.Google Scholar
Greenwood, D. R. 1992. Taphonomic constraints on foliar physiognomic interpretations of Late Cretaceous and Tertiary palaeoclimates. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 71:149190.Google Scholar
Gregory, K. M. and Chase, C. G. 1992. Tectonic significance of paleobotanically estimated climate and altitude of the late Eocene erosion surface, Colorado. Geology, 20:581585.Google Scholar
Herbert, T. D. and D'Hondt, S. L. 1990. Precessional climate cyclicity in Late Cretaceous-Early Tertiary marine sediments: a high resolution chronometer of Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary events. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 99:263275.Google Scholar
Hickey, L. J. 1977. Stratigraphy and paleobotany of the Golden Valley Formation (Early Tertiary) of western North Dakota. Geological Society of America Memoir, 150:1183.Google Scholar
Hickey, L. J. 1980. Paleocene stratigraphy and flora of the Clark's Fork Basin, p. 3349. In Gingerich, P. D. (ed.), Early Cenozoic paleontology and stratigraphy of the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming. University of Michigan Papers in Paleontology.Google Scholar
Hickey, L. J., West, R. M., Dawson, M. R., and Choi, D. K. 1983. Arctic terrestrial biota: paleomagnetic evidence of age disparity with mid-north latitudes during the Late Cretaceous and early Tertiary. Science, 221:11531156.Google Scholar
Hickey, L. J. 1984. Summary and implications of the fossil plant record of the Potomac Group, p. 213248. In Frederickson, N. O. & Krafft, K. (eds.), Cretaceous and Tertiary stratigraphy, paleontology, and structure, southwestern Maryland and northeastern Virginia. American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists.Google Scholar
Hickey, L. J., and Wolfe, J. A. 1975. The bases of angiosperm phylogeny: vegetative morphology. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 62:538589.Google Scholar
Hickey, L. J., Johnson, K. R., and Dawson, M. R. 1988. The stratigraphy, sedimentology, and fossils of the Haughton Formation: a post-impact crater-fill, Devon Island, N. W. T., Canada. Meteoritics, 23:221231.Google Scholar
Hicks, J. F. 1993. Chronostratigraphic analysis of the foreland basin sediments of the latest Cretaceous, Wyoming, , Yale University, New Haven, 251 p.Google Scholar
Izett, G. A., 1990. The Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary interval, Raton Basin, Colorado and New Mexico, and its content of shock-metamorphosed minerals: Evidence relevant to the K/T boundary impact-extinction theory. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 249:1100.Google Scholar
Johnson, K. R. 1988. Quantitative plant taphonomy of the Wharton Brook floodplain, North Haven, Connecticut. American Journal of Botany, 75:111.Google Scholar
Johnson, K. R. 1989. A high-resolution megafloral biostratigraphy spanning the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the Northern Great Plains. , Yale University, New Haven, 556 p.Google Scholar
Johnson, K. R., Nichols, D. J., Tauxe, L., and Clark, D. 1990. Floral zonation and magnetostratigraphy of the Hell Creek (late Maastrichtian) and lower Fort Union (early Paleocene) Formations, North Dakota. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Program, 22:323.Google Scholar
Johnson, K. R. 1992. Leaf-fossil evidence for extensive floral extinction at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, North Dakota, USA. Cretaceous Research, 13:91117.Google Scholar
Kirschbaum, M. A. and McCabe, P. J. 1992. Controls on the accumulation of coal and on the development of anastomosed fluvial systems in the Cretaceous Dakota Formation of southern Utah. Sedimentology 39:581598.Google Scholar
Lerbekmo, J. F. and Coulter, K. C. 1985. Late Cretaceous to early Tertiary magnetostratigraphy of a continental sequence: Red Deer Valley, Alberta, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22:567583.Google Scholar
Lesquereux, L. 1883. Contributions to the flora of the Western Territories. Part 3, The Cretaceous and Tertiary floras. U. S. Geological and Geographical Surveys of the Territories Report, 8:1203.Google Scholar
Lillegraven, J. A. and McKenna, M. C. 1986. Fossil mammals from the “Mesaverde” Formation (Late Cretaceous, Judithian) of the Bighorn and Wind River Basins, Wyoming, with a definition of Late Cretaceous North American Land-Mammal Ages. American Museum Novitates, 2840:168.Google Scholar
Macginitie, H. D. 1969. The Eocene Green River flora of northwestern Colorado and northeastern Utah. University of California Publications, Geological Science, 83:1140.Google Scholar
Manchester, S. R. 1981. Fossil plants of the Eocene Clarno Nut Beds. Oregon Geology, 43:7581.Google Scholar
Manchester, S. R. 1987. The fossil history of the Juglandaceae. Missouri Botanical Gardens Monographs Systematic Botany, 21:137.Google Scholar
McClammer, J. U. Jr. and Crabtree, D. R. 1989. Post-Barremian (Early Cretaceous) to Paleocene paleobotanical collections in the Western Interior of North America. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 57:221232.Google Scholar
Meyer, H. W. 1992. Lapse rates and other variables applied to estimating paleoaltitudes from fossil floras. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, and Palaeoecology, 99:7199.Google Scholar
Nichols, D. J., Hickey, L. J., McWeeney, L. J., and Wolfe, J. A., 1992. Plants at the K/T boundary: discussion and reply. Nature 356: 295296.Google Scholar
Nichols, D. J., and Ott, H. L. 1974. Biostratigraphy and evolution of the Momipites-Caryapollenites lineage in the Early Tertiary in the Wind River Basin, Wyoming. Palynology, 2:93112.Google Scholar
Nichols, D. J., Jacobsen, S. R., and Tschudy, R. H. 1982. Cretaceous palynomorph biozones for the central northern Rocky Mountain Region of the United States, p. 721734. In Powers, R. B. (ed.), Geologic studies in the Cordillera thrust belt. Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, Denver.Google Scholar
Obradovich, J. D. In press. A Cretaceous time scale. Geological Association of Canada Special Paper 39.Google Scholar
Obradovich, J. D., and Cobban, W. A. 1975. A time-scale for the Late Cretaceous of the Western Interior of North America, p. 3154. In Caldwell, W. G. E. (ed.), The Cretaceous System in the Western Interior of North America. Geological Association of Canada Special Paper 13.Google Scholar
Pillmore, C. L., Tschudy, R. H., Orth, C. J., Gilmore, J. S., and Knight, J. D. 1984. Geologic framework of nonmarine Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary sites, Raton Basin, New Mexico and Colorado. Science, 223:11801183.Google Scholar
Prasad, G., Lejal-Nicol, A., and Vaudois-Mieja, N. 1986. A Tertiary age for upper Nubian Sandstone Formation, central Sudan. American Association Petroleum Geology Bulletin, 70:138142.Google Scholar
Raine, J. I. 1984. Outline of a palynological zonation of Cretaceous to Paleogene terrestrial sediments in West Coast Region, South Island, New Zealand. New Zealand Geological Survey Report PAL 109, p. 182.Google Scholar
Rigby, J. K. Jr., Newman, K. R., Smit, J., Van Der Kaars, S., Sloan, R. E., and Rigby, J. K. 1987. Dinosaurs from the Paleocene part of the Hell Creek Formation, McCone County, Montana. Palaios, 2:296302.Google Scholar
Sadler, P. M. 1981. Sediment accumulation and the completeness of stratigraphic sections. Journal of Geology, 89:569584.Google Scholar
Sadler, P. M. 1983. Is the present long enough to measure the past. Nature, 302:752.Google Scholar
Scheihing, M. H. and Pfefferkorn, H. W. 1984. The taphonomy of land plants in the Orinoco Delta: a model for the incorporation of plant parts in clastic sediments of late Carboniferous age in Euramerica. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology, 41:205240.Google Scholar
Schindel, D. E., 1980. Microstratigraphic sampling and the limits of paleontological resolution. Paleobiology, 6:408426.Google Scholar
Sheehan, P. M., Fastovsky, D. E., Hoffmann, R. G., Berghaus, C. B., and Gabriel, D. L. 1991. Sudden extinction of the dinosaurs: latest Cretaceous, Upper Great Plains, U.S.A. Science, 254:835839.Google Scholar
Snavely, P. D. Jr., Niem, A. R., Macleod, N. S., and Rau, W. W. 1980. Makah Formation–a deep-marginal-basin sequence of late Eocene and Oligocene age in the northwestern Olympic Penninsula, Washington. U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1162-B:128.Google Scholar
Spicer, R. A. 1981. The sorting and deposition of allochthonous plant material in a modern environment at Silwood lake, Silwood Park, Berkshire, England. U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper, 1143:77p.Google Scholar
Spicer, R. A., and Parrish, J. T. 1990. Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary palaeoclimates of northern high latitudes: a quantitative view. Journal of the Geological Society of London, 147:329341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Upchurch, G. R. Jr. 1987. Mid-Cretaceous to Early Tertiary vegetation and climate: evidence from fossil leaves and wood, p. 75106. In Friis, E. M., Chaloner, W. G., and Crane, P. R. (eds.), The origins of angiosperms and their biological consequences. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Upchurch, G. R., and Dilcher, D. L. 1990. Cenomanian angiosperm leaf megafossils, Dakota Formation, Rose Creek locality, Jefferson County, Southeastern Nebraska. U. S. Geological Survey Bulletin, 1915:155.Google Scholar
Wheeler, E. A. and Baas, P. 1991. A survey of the fossil record for dicotyledonous wood and its significance for evolutionary and ecological wood anatomy. International Association of Wood Anatomy Bulletin, 12:275332.Google Scholar
Wing, S. L. 1981. A study of paleoecology and paleobotany in the Willwood Formation (Early Eocene, Wyoming). , Yale University, 390 p.Google Scholar
Wing, S. L. 1987. Eocene and Oligocene floras and vegetation of the Rocky Mountains. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 74:748784.Google Scholar
Wing, S. L., Bown, T. M., and Obradovich, J. D. 1991. Early Eocene biotic and climatic change in interior western North America. Geology, 19:11891192.Google Scholar
Wing, S. L., Hickey, L. J., and Burnham, R. J. 1992. Exceptional Maastrichtian flora shows that high diversity does not imply ecological dominance. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Program, 24: A271.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. A. 1978. A Paleobotanical interpretation of Tertiary climates in the Northern Hemisphere. American Scientist, 66:694703.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. A. 1990. Palaeobotanical evidence for a marked temperature increase following the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary. Nature, 343:153156.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. A. 1991. Palaeobotanical evidence for a June ‘impact winter’ at the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary. Nature, 352:420423.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. A. 1992. Climatic, floristic, and vegetational changes near the Eocene/Oligocene Boundary in North America, p. 421436. In Prothero, D. R. and Berggren, W. A. (eds.), Eocene-Oligocene Climatic and Biotic Evolution. Princeton University Press, Princeton.Google Scholar
Wolfe, J. A., and Wehr, W. 1987. Middle Eocene dicotyledonous plants from Republic, northeastern Washington. U. S. Geological Survey Bulletin, 1597:125.Google Scholar
Wood, H. E. 1941. Nomenclature and correlations of the North American continental Tertiary. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 52:148.Google Scholar
Woodburne, M. O. (ed.). 1987. Cenozoic mammals of North America: geochronology and biostratigraphy. University of California Press, Berkeley, 336p.Google Scholar