2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2013.09.006
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Paleoecology of Early Pennsylvanian vegetation on a seasonally dry tropical landscape (Tynemouth Creek Formation, New Brunswick, Canada)

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Cited by 68 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…Root traces are another common in-channel trace fossil on accretion set boundaries. Root traces may occur on upper parts of bars only, if the channel maintains some base flow perennially (e.g., Singh and Bhardwaj, 1991;Singh et al, 1993Singh et al, , 2007Shukla et al, 2001;, or occur throughout the channel fills, where channels are seasonally dry (e.g., Fielding et al, 2009;Allen et al, 2011Allen et al, , 2013Allen et al, , 2014Plink-Björklund and Birgenheier, 2013;Bashforth et al, 2014). Variable degree of pedogenic modification accompanies the occurrence of terrestrial traces, in places indicating sustained subaerial exposure (e.g., Hasiotis, 2004) (Fig.…”
Section: In-channel Trace Fossilsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Root traces are another common in-channel trace fossil on accretion set boundaries. Root traces may occur on upper parts of bars only, if the channel maintains some base flow perennially (e.g., Singh and Bhardwaj, 1991;Singh et al, 1993Singh et al, , 2007Shukla et al, 2001;, or occur throughout the channel fills, where channels are seasonally dry (e.g., Fielding et al, 2009;Allen et al, 2011Allen et al, , 2013Allen et al, , 2014Plink-Björklund and Birgenheier, 2013;Bashforth et al, 2014). Variable degree of pedogenic modification accompanies the occurrence of terrestrial traces, in places indicating sustained subaerial exposure (e.g., Hasiotis, 2004) (Fig.…”
Section: In-channel Trace Fossilsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(c) Centroclinal cross strata, (d) upturned bedding around a former tree, and (e) three broken Calamites, Pennsylvanian Sydney Mines Fm., Nova Scotia (from Allen et al(2014)). (f) Upright cordaitalean (Dadoxylon) tree, and (g) complete Cordaites leaves in Pennsylvanian Tynemouth Creek Fm., Canada (from Bashforth et al(2014)). (h) Small in situ tree fossil encased in channel sandstone, showing tilting in down-paleoflow direction (to right) and upstream-trailing roots (to left) in Pennsylvanian Maritimes basin (from Fielding et al(2009)).…”
Section: In-channel Trace Fossilsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For the most part, such deposits represent wetland assemblages and comprise plants that are well known, often to the specific level (e.g., Libertín et al, 2009;Opluštil et al, 2009;Thomas, 2013). In situ preservation of plants from seasonally dry habitats is reported less frequently than from wetlands Bashforth et al, 2014), which is perhaps more a function of the dearth of artificial exposures, such as those created by coal mining, than an actual taphonomic bias. The deposit described here most likely never would have been discovered were it not for commercial quarrying of the host rock for flagstone.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, we believe the presence of dryland plants, so rare within stratigraphic sequences of the Pennsylvanian coal measures but present in these western Pangean basins as part of floras that are compositionally and sedimentologically distinct from the wetland floras (e.g., Galtier et al, 1992;Falcon-Lang et al, 2009;Plotnick et al, 2009;Bashforth et al, 2014Bashforth et al, , 2016, calls for setting the default climate at the dry end of the spectrum represented by the plant groups n u m b e r 9 9 • 3 5 that are present. The remainder of the flora indicates a heterogeneous landscape of the kind that is more typical of settings with seasonal rainfall than of strongly humid to perhumid climates.…”
Section: Stratigraphic and Environmental Interpretationsmentioning
confidence: 96%