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New collections of a leaf compression-impression paleoflora preserved in fluvio-lacustrine sediments of the upper Chickaloon Formation, south-central Alaska, United States, provide leaf physiognomic climate estimates for the early Eocene in southern Alaska and rare data on plant-insect interactions from a subarctic setting. Thirty-nine broadleaf angiosperm morphotypes occur in a parautochthonous assemblage along with Metasequoia shoots and trunks, compressions of a diverse suite of seeds, monocotyledonous aquatic plants, freshwater gastropods, and inclusion-bearing dispersed amber. Leaf-character derived mean annual temperature estimates (11–14.6 °C) are significantly warmer than Alaska at present and indicate warm temperate conditions at the time of deposition. Leaf-derived mean annual precipitation estimates of ∼110–160 cm/annum are comparable to those from similar-age paleofloras in Arctic Canada and indicate wetter conditions than nearly coeval paleofloras further south in the North American mid-latitudes. Leaf herbivory is rare in the Chickaloon assemblage (∼9% of leaf fragments) as compared to other, lower latitude Eocene assemblages, but exhibits four of the main leaf-damage guilds (hole feeding, margin feeding, surface feeding, and skeletonization). These data provide a rare glimpse at a high-latitude terrestrial forested ecosystem during a global hothouse climate phase and thus have implications in understanding how biogeographic patterning and ecological systems respond to non-analog, warm high-latitude environmental conditions.
Shells of intertidal bivalve mollusks contain sub-seasonally to interannually resolved records of temperature and salinity variations in coastal settings. Such data are essential to understand changing land-sea interactions through time, specifically atmospheric (precipitation rate, glacial meltwater, river discharge) and oceanographic circulation patterns; however, independent temperature and salinity proxies are currently not available. We established a model for reconstructing daily water temperatures with an average standard error of ∼1.3 °C based on variations in the width of lunar daily growth increments of Saxidomus gigantea from southwestern Alaska, United States. Temperature explains 70% of the variability in shell growth. When used in conjunction with stable oxygen isotope data, this approach can also be used to identify changes in past seawater salinity. This study provides a better understanding of the hydrological changes related to the Alaska Coastal Current (ACC). In combination with δ18Oshell values, increment-derived temperatures were used to estimate salinity changes with an average error of 1.4 ± 1.1 PSU. Our model was calibrated and tested with modern shells and then applied to archaeological specimens. As derived from the model, the time interval of 988–1447 cal yr BP was characterized by ∼1–2 °C colder and much drier (2–5 PSU) summers. During that time, the ACC was likely flowing much more slowly than at present. In contrast, between 599–1014 cal yr BP, the Aleutian low may have been stronger, which resulted in a 3 °C temperature decrease during summers and 1–2 PSU fresher conditions than today; the ACC was probably flowing more quickly at that time. The shell growth–temperature model can be used to estimate seasonal to interannual salinity and temperature changes in freshwater-influenced environments through time.
The Ingersoll shale (Santonian) is a small mudstone lens in eastern Alabama, interpreted as an abandoned tidal-channel fill that accumulated rapidly within the lower reaches of a bayhead delta. The diverse biota found in this fossil Lagerstätte includes 14 individual feather specimens, the largest collection known from the Mesozoic of North America. Occurring separately throughout nearly the entire thickness of the clay lens and with a range of sizes and morphologies, the feathers most likely represent a number of theropod species. Based on known taxa in the region, the largest specimen (16.5 cm) may be a rectrix (tail feather) from a dromaeosaurid dinosaur or from a hesperornithid. Smaller feathers may have belonged to a range of shore birds. The best-preserved specimens were found in the finest grained intervals. SEM examination reveals very well preserved microstructure consisting of carbonized rod-shaped bodies ∼1 µm in length, preserved in three dimensions and solid internally. Although identical in size and shape to modern feather-degrading bacilliform bacteria and displaying some bacteria-like features, their alignment along the axis of feather structures indicates that they are more likely the fossil remains of melanosomes, melanin bodies used for color production during life. No three-dimensional arrays or patterned differences of morphotypes have been seen thus far; almost all elements are elongate (apparently eumelanin). Inferred colors for four of the feathers, based on differences in melanosome morphologies, range from gray and brownish gray to black. Whereas the majority of feather-bearing deposits represent inland lakes, the estuarine setting adds a view of coastal feathered theropods preserved in detail by rapid deposition of fine-grained sediment.
Previous comparative taphonomic studies have convincingly demonstrated that the taphonomic state of crinoid fossils is controlled largely by paleoenvironmental processes and constructional morphology. While taphonomic variability among depositional facies has a long history of investigation, the degree to which preservational heterogeneity is controlled by crinoid morphology has only recently been addressed and only at relatively coarse levels. Most studies to date have focused on taphonomic variability at the subclass or ordinal level, with little documentation of lower level taphonomic variation within a single crinoid subclass. A remarkably diverse, abundant, and well-preserved crinoid fauna, recovered from a single mudstone interval within the Upper Pennsylvanian (Missourian) Barnsdall Formation in northeastern Oklahoma, midcontinent North America, provides a unique opportunity to examine taphonomic trends among poteriocrine cladid crinoids at refined taxonomic levels. Genus-level variations in specimen completeness, axis of compaction, arm position, and features attributed to decay and scavenging are observed within this assemblage and taphonomic trends related primarily to the size of individuals are detected. These results indicate that taphonomic variability extends at least to genus level within the subclass Cladida. Understanding this variability is important in interpreting the genesis and nature of crinoid-bearing units, as minor variations in morphology, ethology, and scavenger preferences impart unexpected biostratinomic heterogeneity to Copan crinoid fauna that would otherwise be difficult to explain. Taphonomic variability at low taxonomic levels and the influence of preferential scavenging should be accounted for in future crinoid taphonomic grade studies, particularly in Pennsylvanian and younger deposits, in order to avoid taphonomic assumptions that may be overly broad.
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