How to translate text using browser tools
1 February 2011 A LATE CRETACEOUS CONIFEROUS WOODLAND FROM THE SAN JUAN BASIN, NEW MEXICO
K. SIAN DAVIES-VOLLUM, LISA D. BOUCHER, PATRICK HUDSON, A. YAEL PROSKUROWSKI
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The Fossil Forest Research Natural Area (FFRNA) in New Mexico is the site of an exceptionally preserved fossil forest of Campanian age. This study combines paleoecological, taxonomic, and sedimentological analysis, together with GIS mapping of 68 fossil tree stumps and nine fossil logs, in order to provide a detailed description of this forest. Wood analysis of stumps illustrates that the forest is almost exclusively composed of conifers most likely related to the Cupressaceae. Reconstruction of the forest indicates that the conifers were mature and widely spaced, creating an open canopy woodland; however, leaf litter directly associated with the fossil woodland has not been preserved, so the detailed composition of its understory remains enigmatic. Analysis of the substrate in which the stumps were rooted suggests that trees grew in a gley soil under wet floodplain conditions. Mean sensitivity analysis of growth rings in the stumps indicates that small-scale environmental disturbances on the floodplain, such as periodic flooding, or regional environmental disturbances, such as volcanism, disrupted wood production. The death of the woodland was probably due to waterlogging and burial by suspended sediment associated with flooding. Despite the presumed dominance of angiosperms in disturbed, riparian environments during the Late Cretaceous, this study indicates that conifers were still dominant in some subenvironments at this time and could form mature open canopy woodlands on wet unstable floodplains.

K. SIAN DAVIES-VOLLUM, LISA D. BOUCHER, PATRICK HUDSON, and A. YAEL PROSKUROWSKI "A LATE CRETACEOUS CONIFEROUS WOODLAND FROM THE SAN JUAN BASIN, NEW MEXICO," PALAIOS 26(2), 89-98, (1 February 2011). https://doi.org/10.2110/palo.2010.p10-090r
Accepted: 1 October 2010; Published: 1 February 2011
JOURNAL ARTICLE
10 PAGES

This article is only available to subscribers.
It is not available for individual sale.
+ SAVE TO MY LIBRARY

KEYWORDS
Campanian
depositional environment
fossil forest
Paleoecology
paleoenvironment
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top