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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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United States
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Texas
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Bastrop County Texas (1)
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fossils
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microfossils (2)
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palynomorphs
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Dinoflagellata (1)
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miospores
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pollen (2)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Paleogene
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Calvert Bluff Formation (1)
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Eocene
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middle Eocene
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Carrizo Sand (1)
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Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (1)
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Wilcox Group (1)
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Primary terms
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Paleogene
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Calvert Bluff Formation (1)
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Eocene
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middle Eocene
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Carrizo Sand (1)
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Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (1)
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Wilcox Group (1)
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palynomorphs
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Dinoflagellata (1)
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miospores
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pollen (2)
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United States
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Texas
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Bastrop County Texas (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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tidalite (1)
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sedimentary structures
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tidalite (1)
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sediments
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tidalite (1)
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Abstract: An integrated palynological and sedimentological study of Wilcox/Carrizo outcrops in and near Tahitian Village, Bastrop County, Texas, has led to a reevaluation of their chronostratigraphic significance and depositional environments. Strata at the well-known Pine Forest Golf Course and nearby Red Bluff outcrops, together with lesser-known outcrops in the vicinity, are important for source-to-sink linkages with coeval downdip Wilcox Group strata in the deep-water Gulf of Mexico (GOM). This updip succession is fragmentary, with erosional breaks between lithologic units. It represents nearshore shallow-marine to coastal environments throughout, with widespread evidence of tidal influence. Shallow-marine trace fossils are present, and although these are generally sporadic in sandstones, the Calvert Bluff Formation includes extensive Ophiomorpha galleries. Sabinetown Formation parasequences are mostly mud-dominated tidalites with locally common marine trace fossils in more arenaceous intervals. A bioturbated siltstone immediately above the Sabinetown Formation yielded the first Texas record of common to abundant Apectodinium, an acme potentially indicating the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), and thereby providing a correlation with PETM intervals in GOM wells. At all locations, the base of the Carrizo Formation is a marine Glossifungites surface. Siltstone rip-up clasts draped on sigmoidal cross-beds and robust Ophiomorpha indicate the Carrizo Formation probably represents a tidal delta, not fluvial channels.
A recycling method for LST® contaminated during heavy liquid separation in palynological processing
An alternative to acetolysis: application of an enzyme-based method for the palynological preparation of fresh pollen, honey samples and bee capsules
Lignites of the Wilcox and Jackson Groups in east Texas were deposited in marginal marine depositional complexes during times of cyclic sediment deposition. Thick upper Wilcox lignites occur within cycles of estuarine strata. Thin upper Jackson lignites occur within strandplain/shoreface deposits. Palynology of the lignites and enclosing sediments reveal two distinct climatic regimes: warm and equable during Wilcox deposition versus variable warm-cool during Jackson deposition. Four palynologic assemblages have been recovered from lignite-bearing upper Wilcox strata, and six palynologic assemblages have been recovered from upper Jackson nonmarine and marine strata. Wilcox lignites contain assemblages indicating change from closed-canopy freshwater swamps populated by a community dominated by chestnut and walnut family trees, to open-canopy swamps that add ferns to the community, to a community of palms and ferns that extends into the overlying marine-influenced mudstones, and capped by marine siliciclastics containing an assemblage of dinoflagellates and transported cypress pollen and fern spores. The Jackson assemblages indicate a transition from a palm-dominated community in the sands and silts to a fern marsh community in the silty mudstones and base of the lignites, to closed-canopy freshwater communities in the lignite populated by a tropical walnut and swamp tupelo, to an open-canopy community populated where ferns replace the tupelo, capped by a swamp community dominated by a chestnutlike tree and leatherwood, especially in lignites overlain by marine sediments; marine sediments contain an assemblage of dinoflagellates and transported pollen. The dominant tree in Wilcox swamp communities is chestnut, whereas Jackson swamps are dominated by a tropical walnut; ferns are common in both settings. The dominance of cypress in the estuarine-marine transition sediments of the Wilcox suggests an open-water transition between peat swamp and marginal marine environments. The dominance of the chestnutlike tree in the swamp-marine transition of the Jackson indicates a sharp boundary between peat swamp and marine environments.