Authors: | Mathewes, RW; Greenwood, DR; Love, RL |
Year: | 2020 |
Journal: | Can. J. Earth Sci. 57: 348-365 Article Link (DOI) |
Title: | The Kanaka Creek fossil flora (Huntingdon Formation), British Columbia, Canada - paleoenvironment and evidence for Paleocene age using palynology and macroflora |
Abstract: | Paleogene sediments of the Huntingdon Formation, a correlative to the Chuckanut Formation of neighbouring Washington State, USA, are exposed in the Greater Vancouver area, British Columbia, Canada. Palynology and plant macrofossils suggest the Kanaka Creek section is Paleocene rather than Eocene in age. Detrital zircon dating is less decisive, yet indicates the Kanaka rocks are no older than Maastrichtian. Analyses of plant macro- and micro-fossils suggest an early to middle Paleocene age for the Kanaka fossil flora. Paleocene indicators include macrofossils such as Platanus bella, Archeampelos, Hamamelites inequalis, and Ditaxocladus, and pollen taxa such as Paraalnipollenites, Triporopollenites mullensis, and Duplopollis. Paleogene taxa such as Woodwardia maxonii, Macclintockia, and Glyptostrobus dominate the flora. Fungal spores including the Late Cretaceous Pesavis parva and the Paleogene Pesavis tagluensis are notable age indicators. Physiognomy of 41 angiosperm leaf morphotypes from Kanaka Creek yields mean annual temperatures in the microthermal to lower mesothermal range (11.2 +/- 4.3 to 14.6 +/- 2.7 degrees C from leaf margin analysis; 14.8 +/- 2.1 degrees C from Climate Leaf Analysis Multivariate Program), with mild winters (cold month mean temperature 3.9 +/- 3.4 degrees C). Paleoclimate was cooler than the upper Paleocene and Eocene members of the Chuckanut Formation. Mean annual precipitation is estimated at similar to 140 cm with large uncertainties. The Kanaka paleoflora is reconstructed as a mixed conifer-broadleaf forest, sharing common taxa with other western North American Paleocene floras and growing in a temperate moist climate. Kanaka Creek is a rare coastal Paleocene plant locality that provides new insights into coastal vegetation and climate prior to the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum. |
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