4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Vegetation and climate from two Oligocene glacioeustatic sedimentary cycles (31 and 24 Ma) cored by the Cape Roberts Project, Victoria Land Basin, Antarctica

Journal

PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY
Volume 231, Issue 1-2, Pages 41-57

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2005.07.025

Keywords

Antarctica; Oligocene; miospores; paleobotany; paleoenvironment

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The Cape Roberts Project recovered over 1500 m of coastal glaciomarine sediments of Oligocene and Early Miocene age off the Ross Sea margin of Antarctica. The strata are characterised by cyclic repetition of facies in a glaciomarine setting, and are interpreted to be a record of glacial-interglacial episodes involving significant changes ill eustatic sea level oil Milankovitch frequencies. We have Undertaken a detailed Study of pollen and spores (miospores) from an Early Oligocene (31 Ma), and a Late Oligocene (24 Ma) cycle. Although miospores are sparse in the core, averaging only similar to 1 grain per grain of sediment processed, over 1200 Cenozoic miospores were recovered for this study. Previous studies of miospores from Ross Sea sediments have encountered problems differentiating between reworked and in Situ palynomorphs. Here, only samples containing a low relative abundance of all Eocene dinoflagellate cyst assemblage (the Transantarctic Flora) have been used to infer the contemporaneous Oligocene miospore flora. The flora of the Early Oligocene cycle is dominated by three species of Nothofagidites, and four types of Podocarpidites. The assemblage from the Upper Oligocene cycle is also dominated by Nothofagidites and Podocarpidites, bill with the addition of two distinctive taxa, in angiosperm pollen and a bryophyte spore. Notwithstanding these additions, there is a slight decrease in floral diversity between the two cycles. While this study confirms that some floristic changes did occur between Early and Late Oligocene time oil the Victoria Land coast, the present data suggest that the Changes were not extensive. It is likely that the vegetation of both cycles was a low diversity scrub of low stature, consisting of mainly Nothofagus, podocarps, and bryophytes. Modern analogues suggest that this vegetation was growing ill a climate significantly warmer (Mean Summer Monthly Temperature 4-12 degrees C) than is found on the present day Victoria Land (MSMT -5 degrees C), although colder that the temperate climate suggested by the diverse flora found in Ross Sea sediments of Eocene age. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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