VARIABILITY OF EQUATORIAL CLIMATE DURING THE PENNSYLVANIAN: EVIDENCE FROM LATE ATOKAN - EARLIEST DESMOINESIAN WETLAND FLORAS
Each Pennsylvanian stage contains a number of cyclothems, which may record the advance and retreat of continental glaciers (i. e. Pennsylvanian Milankovitch cycles). The constancy of equatorial climate within and between cyclothems is controversial. Sedimentary data suggest relatively dry climates before coal deposition and wet climates during coal deposition. The constancy of plant communities within coal swamps from cyclothem to cyclothem suggests constancy of equatorial climate, particularly rainfall.
Late Atokan earliest Desmoinesian wetland floras from Iowa support rainfall variability during cyclothem deposition, and further suggest that rainfall varied consistently during coal deposition in some cycles. Late Atokan earliest Desmoinesian coals record a transition from relatively dry to relatively wet conditions, with cordaitean gymnosperms at the base of the seam, medullosan seed ferns and tree ferns in the middle of the seam and lycopsids, at the top. High percentages of conifer pollen in these coals suggest even drier conditions in terra firma habitats adjacent to the wetland. This result implies that wet-loving persisted in refugia during times of less rainfall. These Iowa coals accumulated on the northern edge of the equatorial rainy belt. Coals of similar age from the Illinois Basin, in the center of the equatorial rainy zone, experienced wetter conditions and may not show such a strong dry to wet transition.