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Short-term climate and vegetation dynamics in Lena River Delta (northern Yakutia,Eastern Siberia) during early Eocene
Affiliation:1. Federal Scientific Center of the East Asia Terrestrial Biodiversity, Far Eastern Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Prospect Stoletiya 159, Vladivostok, 690022, Russia;2. Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum, Senckenberganlage 25, 60325, Frankfurt Main, Germany;3. Institute for Geosciences, University of Bonn, Nussallee 8, 53115, Bonn, Germany
Abstract:Early Eocene climate and vegetation evolution in northern Yakutia (Eastern Siberia) are quantitatively studied for the first time based on paleobotanical records, using the coexistence approach (CA) for paleoclimate, the plant functional type approach (PFT) and the integrated plant record method (IPR). Paleobotanical data of this time-interval were obtained from 18 palynofloras of the coal beds outcropping on the bank of the Bykovskaya Channel in the area of Bulunkan Bay (Lena River Delta). The results indicate the persistence of warm temperate and at times possibly nearly tropical, overall humid climate conditions throughout the early Eocene, and a relatively strong seasonality in precipitation. The vegetation reconstructed is in agreement with the climate conditions determined by the CA. Analyses of the PFT diversity spectra indicate the prevalence of mixed warm temperate evergreen-deciduous forests. Based on the IPR method, plant biomes varied from mixed mesophytic forests during warmer intervals to broadleaved deciduous forest/mixed mesophytic forest ecotone during cooler episodes. The presence of mangroves in our early Eocene records is possibly related to hyperthermal events such as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum.
Keywords:temperature evolution  precipitation pattern  climate seasonality  structure of plant assemblages  vegetation type  mangrove taxa
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