Fossil soils as grounds for interpreting the advent of large plants and animals on land

A little-explored line of evidence for the antiquity and nature of early vegetation on land is the soils in which they grew. Vegetation is one of a number of factors known to play an important role in forming modern soils and soil features. As in studies of the role of organisms in modern soil formation, what are needed are fossil soils that supported different ancient ecosystems, but for which other soil-forming factors, such as palaeoclimate, palaeogeographical setting, parent materials and duration of formation, were closely comparable. This preliminary petrographic and chemical study compares four palaeosols; three are from the states of Pennsylvania and New York, U.S.A., and the fourth from the Potwar Plateau region of northern Pakistan. All appear to have formed in a subhumid, seasonally dry, subtropical climate, on the alluvial outwash of major mountain ranges, largely formed of sedimentary and metamorphic rocks, and over periods of only a few thousand years. These palaeosols are here named the Potters Mills clay (late Ordovician), Lehigh Gap clay (late Silurian), Peas Eddy clay (late Devonian) and Lal clay (late Miocene). Successively younger palaeosols show increasing degree of weathering, more clayey texture and better soil structure. Deep burrows are abundant in late Ordovician palaeosols, and are evidence of sizeable (3-16 mm diameter) soil animals. Bioturbation in the surface of the late Silurian palaeosol may have been produced by animals or vascular land plants. Large root traces and remains of leaf litter are indications that the late Devonian palaeosol supported a low diversity, streamside gallery forest. Weak redistribution of iron in this palaeosol may have been produced by phenolic and other herbivore suppressant toxins from these early trees. The late Miocene palaeosol is extensively bioturbated, presumably by termites and other creatures. Judging from its root traces and associated sediments and fossils, it supported gallery forest in a region of grassy savanna groveland. These early results encourage the belief that fossil soils may provide useful evidence for the nature of early ecosystems on land, not only complementary to that of early terrestrial fossils, but also in sedimentary sequences too oxidized and acidic to allow preservation of fossil plants and animals.

1994 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 164-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Elias ◽  
A. W. Potter ◽  
Rodney Watkins

The shoo fly Complex of Late Devonian and older Paleozoic age is a regionally extensive rock assemblage in the northern Sierra Nevada of northern California. It consists chiefly of a coherent unit of phyllite, quartzose sandstone, and chert, and a melange unit (Hannah and Moores, 1986). Several limestone lenses in the Taylorsville area comprise the Montgomery Limestone (Diller, 1892, 1908; McMath, 1958; Figure 1). The Montgomery was long considered to be Silurian, largely on the basis of corals, brachiopods, and cephalopods (Diller, 1892, 1908; McMath, 1958; Berry and Boucot, 1970; Merriam, 1972). However, recent analyses of the biota indicate an Ashgill (middle Maysvillian–Gamachian) age (Boucot and Potter, 1977; Harris, personal commun. cited in Hannah and Moores, 1986, p. 790; Potter et al., 1990b; present study).


Stratigraphy ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 205-212
Author(s):  
Kimberly C. Meehan ◽  
Cody Kowalski ◽  
Kimberly Bartlett ◽  
Isabelle Li ◽  
Paul Bembia

ABSTRACT: Researchers in paleontological and paleoecological sciences often need complete disaggregation of rock materials for certain lines of investigation. However, complete disaggregation of more lithified sedimentary rock is known to be problematic. A complete shale disaggregation method implementing quaternary ammonium surfactants,widely used in paleontological sciences for poorly lithified shale and mudstone, was successfully used on well lithified Devonian shale in the Appalachian Basin ofWestern New York. Over 50 Devonian gray and black shale samples were collected from multiple localities in western New York (Cashaqua, Rhinestreet, Skaneateles, Windom, and Ludlowville), coarsely crushed, and fully immersed in a quaternary ammonium surfactant until complete disaggregation was achieved (5–14 days); aliquots were run through a series of nested sieves. The sieved sediments contained hundreds of well-preserved microfossils released from the shale: ostracods, dacryoconarids, and previously unreported palymorphs, charophytes, agglutinated foraminifera, miospores, and other microspherules. These microfossils were easily found within disaggregated and sieved samples but were unrecognizable on the shale surface and destroyed in prior investigations of whole rock thin sections. In addition to more traditional approaches, inclusion of this complete rock disaggregation method may assist in a more complete analysis of material, increase our understandings of ancient basin systems and have important implications on our understanding of the paleoecology during the Late Devonian marine biotic crises.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Ji ◽  
YuLin Wang ◽  
Ye Yang ◽  
Hao Lai ◽  
WenJun Ding ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Septal myectomy has been a standard treatment option for patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) and drug refractory symptoms. However, there are only a few experienced myectomy centers in the world so far, mainly because of high technical difficulty of myectomy. From our clinical experience, the use of the mini-invasive surgical instruments during myectomy may be beneficial to reduce the technical difficulty. This study reports the preliminary experience regarding transaortic septal myectomy using mini-invasive surgical instruments for the treatment of patients with HOCM and drug refractory symptoms, and evaluates the early results following myectomy.Methods Between March 2016 and March 2019, consecutive HOCM patients were included in this analysis who underwent isolated transaortic septal myectomy using the mini-invasive surgical instruments. Intraoperative, in-hospital and follow-up results were analyzed.Results A total of 168 eligible patients (83 males, mean 56.8 ± 12.3 years) were included. Midventricular obstruction was recorded in 7 (4.2%) patients. All included patients underwent transaortic septal myectomy with a mean aortic cross-clamping time of 36.0 ± 8.1 minutes. Nine (5.4%) patients received repeat aortic cross-clamping during surgery. Surgical mortality was 0.6%. Five (3.0%) patients developed complete atrioventricular block and required permanent pacemaker implantation. The median follow-up time was 6 months. No follow-up deaths occurred with a significant improvement in New York Heart Association functional status. The maximum gradients decreased sharply from the preoperative value (11.6 ± 7.4 mmHg vs. 94.4 ± 2 2.6 mmHg, p<0.001). The median degree of mitral regurgitation fell to 1.0 (vs. 3.0 preoperatively, p<0.001) with a significant reduction in the proportion of moderate or more regurgitation (1.2% vs. 57.7%, p<0.001).Conclusions The use of the mini-invasive surgical instruments may be beneficial to reduce the technical difficulty of transaortic septal myectomy procedure. Transaortic septal myectomy using the mini-invasive surgical instruments may be associated with favorable results.


Author(s):  
Chester E. Finn ◽  
Andrew E. Scanlan

This chapter assesses how the nation's largest school district, New York City, is tackling its own Advanced Placement (AP) challenge. In 2018, the city's Department of Education (DOE) housed more AP students than all but a dozen states. It is therefore not surprising that the challenge of effecting any major change in how AP works in Gotham is gargantuan when placed alongside a city like Fort Worth. Yet the story of AP in the Big Apple shares many of the same dynamics seen in Texas. As recently as 2015–16, more than a hundred of the city's four-hundred-plus high schools offered no AP courses at all—and many of those schools are located in poor neighborhoods full of African American, Hispanic, and immigrant youngsters. Over the years, municipal leaders sought in various ways to rectify this obvious inequity, even as they undertook myriad other high school reforms. One such growth initiative came in September of 2013, when the DOE joined forces with the College Board and the National Math and Science Initiative (NMSI) to launch an “AP Expansion” program meant to last three years. Two years later, Mayor Bill de Blasio declared—as part of his own ambitious education initiatives—that AP would be introduced into every high school that did not already have it. The chapter then analyzes in detail these two citywide initiatives, including their early results and some lessons that may be drawn from their experience to date.


2017 ◽  
Vol 73 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 383-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexey S. Tesakov ◽  
Vadim V. Titov ◽  
Alexandra N. Simakova ◽  
Pavel D. Frolov ◽  
Elena V. Syromyatnikova ◽  
...  

Abstract Late Miocene continental deposits overlying the Khersonian marine sediments near the city of Maikop bordering the Belaya River (North Caucasus) yielded a diverse biotic record including palynology, ostracods, fresh-water and terrestrial molluscs, fishes, amphibians and reptiles, birds, and mammals. The obtained data indicate predominantly wooded landscapes along the banks of a large fresh-water estuarine or lagoonal basin with occasional connection with the sea. The basin existed in a warm temperate to subtropical climate with a high humidity and an estimated mean annual precipitation above 800 mm. The mammalian assemblage with Hipparion spp., Alilepus sp., Paraglirulus schultzi, Eozapus intermedius, Parapodemus lugdunensis, Collimys caucasicus sp. nov., Neocricetodon cf. progressus, etc. is referable to the early Turolian, MN 11. The data regarding composition and stage of evolution of the small mammal content combined with mostly normal polarity of the fossiliferous deposits, and the age estimates of the upper Khersonian boundary as between 8.6 and 7.9 Ma indicate a plausible correlation with Chron C4n and an age range between 8.1–7.6 Ma.


2015 ◽  
Vol 39 (5) ◽  
pp. 455-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leandro Campos Pinto ◽  
Yuri Lopes Zinn ◽  
Carlos Rogério de Mello ◽  
Phillip Ray Owens ◽  
Lloyd Darrell Norton ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTUnderstanding soil formation processes across different landscapes is needed to predict how soil properties will respond to land use change. This study aimed to characterize mountainous Inceptisols (Cambisols) under high altitude subtropical climate in southeastern Brazil, by soil physical, chemical and micromorphological analyses, under native forest and pasture. The soil under pasture had a greater bulk density than under forest, resulting in a severe reduction of macroporosity. At two depths, coarse quartz grains are angular, suggesting absence of transportational processes, thus confirming an autochthonous pedogenesis from the underlying gneissic rock. Most feldspars were weathered beyond recognition, but mineral alteration was commonly seen across cleavage plans and edges of micas. The micromorphological results suggest an intermediate stage of mineral weathering and soil development, which is in accordance with properties expected to be found in Inceptisols.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document