PLANT MEGAFOSSILS, PALYNOMORPHS, AND PALEOENVIRONMENT FROM THE LATE MIDDLE TO LATE EOCENE BURNABY MOUNTAIN FLORA, HUNTINGDON FORMATION, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA


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Authors: Mathewes, RW; Greenwood, DR; Reichgelt, T
Year: 2023
Journal: Int. J. Plant Sci.   Article Link (DOI)
Title: PLANT MEGAFOSSILS, PALYNOMORPHS, AND PALEOENVIRONMENT FROM THE LATE MIDDLE TO LATE EOCENE BURNABY MOUNTAIN FLORA, HUNTINGDON FORMATION, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA
Abstract: Premise of research. The Eocene fossil flora of the area around Vancouver, British Columbia, is poorly known despite work beginning in the 1890s to 1920s. The floristic character of the previously unstudied Burnaby Mountain flora from the Huntingdon Formation in British Columbia is reconstructed using plant megafossils and palynology. This site offers insight into the terrestrial vegetation and paleoclimate during the late middle to late Eocene of the Pacific Northwest of North America in a coastal setting during a global cooling trend. Methodology. Megaflora and microflora were identified, and the combined flora was compared with that of coeval floras from northwestern Washington. Paleoclimate was reconstructed from leaf morphology using the Climate Leaf Analysis Multivariate Program, leaf margin analysis, and leaf area analysis. A probabilistic nearest-living-relative approach was used to reconstruct paleoclimate independently of leaf morphology, using taxonomic identifications from both mega- and microfossils. These data were combined in an ensemble approach. Pivotal results. The Burnaby Mountain fossil flora is late middle Eocene to late Eocene in age and shares key plant taxa with the coeval Upper Ravenian flora of the Puget Group and the upper Chumstick Formation of northwestern Washington. The fossil flora contained a mix of subtropical and temperate forest elements, including rare palm and possible cycad leaf fragments, rare conifer pollen, and a diversity of broad-leaved trees. Conclusions. The reconstructed paleoclimate suggests humid warm-temperate to marginally subtropical conditions in coastal British Columbia during the late middle Eocene to late Eocene. An ensemble paleoclimate approach provided a most parsimonious mean annual temperature estimate of 16.2 degrees C +/- 3.1 degrees C for the Burnaby Mountain fossils and mean annual precipitation of 134 +/- 56 cm. A modern climatic analog is present on the East Coast of the United States in North Carolina, where palms are part of the native flora.
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