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Tournaisian forested wetlands in the Horton Group of Atlantic Canada

Michael C. Rygel, John H. Calder, Martin R. Gibling, Murray K. Gingras and Camilla S. A. Melrose
Tournaisian forested wetlands in the Horton Group of Atlantic Canada (in Wetlands through time, Stephen F. Greb (editor) and William A. DiMichele (editor))
Special Paper - Geological Society of America (2006) 399: 103-126

Abstract

The Horton Group (late Famennian to Tournaisian) of Atlantic Canada provides an unusually complete record of Early Mississippian wetland biota. Best known for tetrapod fossils from "Romer's Gap," this unit also contains numerous horizons with standing vegetation. The taphonomy and taxonomy of Horton Group fossil forests have remained enigmatic because of poor preservation, curious stump cast morphology, and failure to recognize the unusual sedimentary structures formed around standing plants. Four forested horizons within the Horton Group are preserved as cryptic casts and vegetation-induced sedimentary structures formed by the interaction of detrital sediment with in situ plants. Protostigmaria, the lobed base of the arborescent lycopsid Lepidodendropsis, occur as sandstone-filled casts attached to dense root masses. Mudstone-filled hollows formed when a partially entombed plant decayed, leaving a void that was later infilled by muddy sediment. A scratch semi-circle formed where a current bent a small plant, causing it to inscribe concentric grooves into the adjacent muddy substrate. Obstacle marks developed where flood waters excavated erosional scours into sandy sediment surrounding juvenile Lepidodendropsis. These cryptic lycopsid forests had considerably higher densities than their Pennsylvanian counterparts. Vegetation-induced sedimentary structures are abundant in Horton Group strata and could easily be misidentified as purely hydrodynamic or soft-sediment deformation structures without careful analysis. Recognition of these structures in early Paleozoic strata has great potential to expand our knowledge about the distribution of early land plants.


ISSN: 0072-1077
EISSN: 2331-219X
Coden: GSAPAZ
Serial Title: Special Paper - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 399
Title: Tournaisian forested wetlands in the Horton Group of Atlantic Canada
Title: Wetlands through time
Author(s): Rygel, Michael C.Calder, John H.Gibling, Martin R.Gingras, Murray K.Melrose, Camilla S. A.
Author(s): Greb, Stephen F.editor
Author(s): DiMichele, William A.editor
Affiliation: Dalhousie University, Department of Earth Sciences, Halifax, NS, Canada
Affiliation: University of Kentucky, Kentucky Geological Survey, Lexington, KY, United States
Pages: 103-126
Published: 2006
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
ISBN: 0-8137-2399-X
References: 125
Accession Number: 2006-069425
Categories: Stratigraphy
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. strat. cols., 2 tables, geol. sketch map
N44°00'00" - N46°00'00", W66°00'00" - W64°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Smithsonian Institution, USA, United StatesNova Scotia Department of Natural Resources, CAN, CanadaUniversity of Alberta, CAN, Canada
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 200640

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