Paper No. 6
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM
PALEOECOLOGY AND PALYNOLOGIC INDICATORS OF PALEOCLIMATE, MIDDLE EOCENE CLAIBORNE GROUP LIGNITE OF KENTUCKY
Detailed petrography and palynology together describe the depositional environments and paleoecology of an abandoned meander-fill system in western Kentucky. Oriented block petrography reveals alternating clay-rich and attrinite-rich zones of variable thickness. Woody tissues, where present, do not show dessication features and deflation layers could not be identified. Overall, petrography is indicative of a topogenous mire. Mire palyno-assemblages are less diverse than assemblages reported from clays in the region. Castanea-Cupuliferoidaepollenites assemblages dominate the entire system and other tree pollen are common; fungal spores are relatively uncommon. Weighted statistical analyses reveal ecological groupings beyond this dominance and define botanical succession within the mire. The closest-living-relative method for determining paleoclimate indicates temperate to warm temperate conditions during deposition.