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Catastrophically buried Middle Pennsylvanian Sigillaria and calamitean sphenopsids from Indiana, USA; what kind of vegetation was this?

William A. Dimichele, W. John Nelson, Scott Elrick and Philip R. Ames
Catastrophically buried Middle Pennsylvanian Sigillaria and calamitean sphenopsids from Indiana, USA; what kind of vegetation was this?
Palaios (March 2009) 24 (3): 159-166

Abstract

A catastrophically buried stand of calamitean sphenopsids and sigillarian lycopsids is reported from the Middle Pennsylvanian of southwestern Indiana, in the Illinois Basin. The plants were exposed in the highwall of a small surface mine and were rooted in a thin bed of coal (peat), thus representing a flooded and buried swamp surface. Coarse, floodborne silts and sands buried the forest to a depth of <3 m or more, before further incursions of water and sediment truncated the deposit. The rocks are part of the Staunton Formation. Taking up >250 linear meters of exposed highwall surface, the vegetation appears to have been a patchwork of calamitean thickets, with stems perhaps as tall as 3-5 m, within which scattered, but much larger, emergent Sigillaria trees grew, possibly reaching heights of 10-15 m. No ground cover was observed, nor were foliage or reproductive organs attributable to the dominant plants found. The growth of this vegetation in a peat-forming swamp indicates conditions of high water availability, likely in a humid, high-rainfall climate. This kind of plant assemblage, however, cannot be characterized as a rain forest, given that it consisted of medium-height thickets of horsetails with scattered, emergent, and polelike, giant lycopsids, thus lacking a closed upper canopy and possibly only partially shading the ground.


ISSN: 0883-1351
Serial Title: Palaios
Serial Volume: 24
Serial Issue: 3
Title: Catastrophically buried Middle Pennsylvanian Sigillaria and calamitean sphenopsids from Indiana, USA; what kind of vegetation was this?
Affiliation: Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History, Department of Paleobiology, Washington, DC, United States
Pages: 159-166
Published: 200903
Text Language: English
Publisher: Society for Sedimentary Geology, Tulsa, OK, United States
References: 53
Accession Number: 2009-032351
Categories: Paleobotany
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. strat. col., sketch map
N39°07'60" - N39°34'60", W87°15'00" - W86°55'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Illinois State Geological Survey, USA, United StatesBlack Beauty Coal Company, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), Tulsa, OK, United States
Update Code: 200918
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