Title of article
Was the Oligocene–Miocene a time of fire and rain? Insights from brown coals of the southeastern Australia Gippsland Basin
Author/Authors
Holdgate، نويسنده , , Guy R. and Wallace، نويسنده , , Malcolm W. and Sluiter، نويسنده , , Ian R.K. and Marcuccio، نويسنده , , Daniel and Fromhold، نويسنده , , Thomas A. and Wagstaff، نويسنده , , Barbara E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
14
From page
65
To page
78
Abstract
Lithotype cycles (ranging from 10 to 30 m thick) in the brown coals of the Latrobe Valley, Gippsland Basin, Australia, display well-developed lightening-upward trends. Cycle tops are characterized by abrupt and unconformable boundaries with the overlying cycle. Geological, geochemical, palynological and macrofossil evidence is consistent with a relative drying (terrestrialization) upward depositional model for the cycles.
undance of charcoal in dark lithotypes near the cycle bases is explained by the fire-prone and highly flammable nature of the herbaceous/reed wetlands, in common with similar modern wetlands in modern Australasia, in which the dark lithotypes are suggested to have formed. This, together with the greater preservation potential of charcoal in subaqueous environments, results in the wettest facies of the Latrobe Valley coals having the highest charcoal contents. Despite prevailing warm, wet climate conditions and the predominance of rainforests that are suggested to have characterized the Cenozoic of southern Australia, some swamp taxa were clearly already pre-adapted to tolerate fire and are likely to have been the ancestors of the fire-adapted floral communities of modern arid Australia.
Keywords
Facies , Brown coal , lithotypes , Cycles , Sedimentology
Journal title
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
Record number
2298640
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