LARGE WOODY DEBRIS ACCUMULATIONS IN THE LATE PENNSYLVANIAN TROPICS—EVOLUTIONARY SIGNAL OR TECTONO-CLIMATIC ARCHIVE?

Author:

TRÜMPER STEFFEN12,MENCL VÁCLAV34,OPLUŠTIL STANISLAV5,NIEMIROWSKA SANDRA6,RÖßLER RONNY12

Affiliation:

1. 1 Museum für Naturkunde Chemnitz, Chemnitz, 09111, Germany

2. 2 TU Bergakademie Freiberg, Institute of Geology, Freiberg, 09599, Germany

3. 3 Municipal Museum Nová Paka, Nová Paka, 509 01, Czech Republic

4. 6 UNESCO Global Geopark Bohemian Paradise, Turnov, 511 01, Czech Republic

5. 4 Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Science, Prague, 128 00, Czech Republic

6. 5 Private Palaeobotanical Laboratory of Fossil Wood, Warsaw, 00-714, Poland

Abstract

ABSTRACTBy colonizing drylands, plants fundamentally changed continental deposition and, thus, intensified the interaction between life and sediments. Fossil large woody debris in epiclastic strata is a key archive of this environmental turnover, although its interpretation remains challenging due to taphonomic biases. We review voluminous fluvial red-bed successions with sizeable silicified trunks that characterize Middle Pennsylvanian–lower Permian strata of east-central Europe. The stratigraphic occurrence, petrography, architecture of the deposits, and the preservation and nature of the fossil wood are discussed in the context of the tectono-climatic and vegetational evolution of the central-Pangean low latitudes. The log-bearing successions are assigned to five distinct, regionally traceable stratigraphic levels between the middle Moscovian and early Asselian. Up to 20 m long, mostly decorticated trunk fragments occur isolated in more or less feldspathic channel deposits, the architectures and dimensions of which point to large-scale river systems with highly variable discharge. Wood anatomy and floodplain adpression-fossils show that the trunks were derived from cordaitaleans, conifers, and arborescent sphenopsids in more diverse, gymnosperm-dominated dryland floras. The fossil record is biased towards successions formed in large-catchment river systems and, thus, does not accurately document the genuine nature of plant-distribution patterns. Rather, the strata show that large woody debris preservation depended on fluvial style and hydrological regime, hence turning the woody deposits into climate archives. The strata elucidate the climate development in equatorial Pangea, paralleling the acme of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age.

Publisher

Society for Sedimentary Geology

Subject

Paleontology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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