Eocene Florida Plant Remains = Rethink Local Geology A Little

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ResearchBlogging.orgSometimes interesting scientific evidence shows up in unexpected places. Years ago, there had been discussion of the possibility that immediate post glacial climate in the North Atlantic coastal region was unusually warm, but the evidence was spotty. Then, I was looking through material taken from a geotechnical boring placed to assess the geology of a part of Boston Harbor where a new tunnel was being planned, and found a large fragment of a clam embedded in clay. The clay was deposited during the last glacial maximum and later, and was associated with the melting of glaciers in the region. As a matter of routine, I gave it to Russell Barber, a mollusk expert and, at the time, my boss. He identified it as a species of razor clam found these days no farther north than the Carolinas. And thus, yet another piece of spotty evidence!

Something similar happened in Florida just recently. Pollen from the mallow, primrose willow, gentian and other families was found in Eocene sediments (about 35 million years old). The sample was found over 760 meters below the surface and represents at least 17 species of terrestrial plants.

“So what?” you say? Well, 35 million years ago, what is now Florida was in the middle of one off those “ancient seas” we are always hearing about from geologists. This finding indicates that there was land nearby, possibly islands. Or, something else is … different than expected.

In the old days (say, 10 years ago or so) I might have suggested that the pollen could have come from land a very long distance away and transported here by wind, or even on the water’s surface. However, these days we have much better models of how “pollen rain” (as it is called) works, and when pollen is found in a particular deposit estimates can be made of how far away it came from. Some of this pollen came from insect pollinated plants. Compared to wind dispersed pollen, this sort of plant sperm is both rare and usually found near where it was produced.

This is the oldest flora yet described for Florida.

Jarzen, David, & Klug, Curtis (2010). A preliminary investigation of a lower to middle Eocene palynoflora from Pine Island, Florida, USA Palylnology, 34 (2), 164-179 : 10.1080/01916121003737421

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4 thoughts on “Eocene Florida Plant Remains = Rethink Local Geology A Little

  1. Fascinating stuff.

    It is very very geeky of me but when I was an undergrad, one thing I enjoyed doing was picking apart pollen diagrams to work out the real structure of the plant life within the vicinity. Perhaps I would have ended up an environmental archaeologist if the lure of the lower palaeolithic hadn’t got in the way.

  2. Fascinating stuff.

    It is very very geeky of me but when I was an undergrad, one thing I enjoyed doing was picking apart pollen diagrams to work out the real structure of the plant life within the vicinity. Perhaps I would have ended up an environmental archaeologist if the lure of the lower palaeolithic hadn’t got in the way.

  3. Pine Island – unless there’s another one somewhere else in Florida, that’s just off the coast from the Ft. Myers area. Been there. There are some extant shell mounds from the native Caloosa culture preserved there. Not just middens, but were once topped with structures as a way to deal with flooding from storms. It’s also a pleasant day trip with a few good restaurants and the funky artsy hamlet of Matlacha en route from the mainland. Also a nice place for a bike ride.

    And now, a nice place to find Eocene pollen if you have a really long drill.

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