Wetlands through Time
From wetlands to wet spots: Environmental tracking and the fate of Carboniferous elements in Early Permian tropical floras
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Published:January 01, 2006
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CiteCitation
William A. DiMichele, Neil J. Tabor, Dan S. Chaney, W. John Nelson, 2006. "From wetlands to wet spots: Environmental tracking and the fate of Carboniferous elements in Early Permian tropical floras", Wetlands through Time, Stephen F. Greb, William A. DiMichele
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Diverse wetland vegetation flourished at the margins of the Midland Basin in north-central Texas during the Pennsylvanian Period. Extensive coastal swamps and an ever-wet, tropical climate supported lush growth of pteridosperm, marattialean fern, lycopsid, and calamite trees, and a wide array of ground cover and vines. As the Pennsylvanian passed into the Permian, the climate of the area became drier and more seasonal, the great swamps disappeared regionally, and aridity spread. The climatic inferences are based on changes in sedimentary patterns and paleosols as well as the general paleobotanical trends. The lithological patterns include a change from a diverse array of paleosols, including Histosols (ever-wet waterlogged soils), in the late Pennsylvanian to greatly diminished paleosol diversity with poorly developed Vertisols by the Early–Middle Permian transition. In addition, coal seams were present with wide areal distribution in the late Pennsylvanian whereas beds of evaporates were common by the end of the Early Permian. During this climatic transition, wetland plants were confined to shrinking “wet spots” found along permanent streams where the vegetation they constituted remained distinct if increasingly depauperate in terms of species richness. By Leonardian (late Early Permian) time, most of the landscape was dominated by plants adapted to seasonal drought and a deep water table. Wetland elements were reduced to scattered pockets, dominated primarily by weedy forms and riparian specialists tolerant of flooding and burial. By the Middle Permian, even these small wetland pockets had disappeared from the region.
- Carboniferous
- climate change
- floral studies
- geochemistry
- Leonardian
- lithostratigraphy
- Lower Permian
- Midland Basin
- paleobotany
- paleoclimatology
- paleoecology
- paleoenvironment
- paleogeography
- paleosols
- Paleozoic
- paludal environment
- Permian
- Plantae
- stratigraphic units
- terrestrial environment
- Texas
- tropical environment
- United States
- wetlands
- north-central Texas