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Original Article |
1 1Department of Earth Sciences, Dalhousie University, Halifax, N.S., Canada B3H 3J5
2 2Present address: Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1RJ, UK (e-mail: howard.falcon-lang@bristol.ac.uk)
Fossil plant assemblages are described in their sequence stratigraphic context from the Upper Carboniferous (Langsettian) Joggins Formation of Nova Scotia to elucidate ecosystem response to transgressiveregressive rhythms. Results show that rising base level resulted in retrograding submerged coastal mires co-dominated by Lepidodendron and Lepidophloios, which were replaced by short-lived Paralycopodites communities immediately following mire drowning. Extensive brackish bays existed during early highstand, distally fringed by gymnospermous and putative progymnospermous coastal and/or upland vegetation. Late highstand bay filling generated prograding distributary wetlands dominated by flood-disturbed lycopsidpteridospermsphenopsid communities, and locally by cordaite mangroves. As base level fell, well-drained alluvial plains were dominated by fire-prone cordaite and/or Sigillaria communities, which persisted until the next phase of base-level rise. This rhythmic ecosystem succession repeatedly occurred on a c. 50200 ka time scale, and was probably driven by glacialinterglacial climate rhythms.
Key Words: Late Carboniferous sequence stratigraphy vegetation global change
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