2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Using Statistical Palynology to Describe Hydrologically-Controlled Variations in Plant Distribution in a Middle Eocene Wetland

310-6 Using Statistical Palynology to Describe Hydrologically-Controlled Variations in Plant Distribution in a Middle Eocene Wetland



Wednesday, 8 October 2008: 2:45 PM
George R. Brown Convention Center, 320ABC
Jennifer M.K. O'Keefe, Physical Sciences, Morehead State University, 123 Lappin Hall, Morehead State University, Morehead, KY 40351
Middle Eocene Claiborne Group lignites in western Kentucky overly clays that infill meander cut-offs in a paleofloodplain. In a Carlisle County, KY, deposit, the wedge-shaped lignite thins, becoming clay-rich toward the paleostream and thickens, becoming organic-rich toward the paleocutbank. This is similar to modern peat-forming wetlands in the region and on the Atlantic coastal plain. Palynomorphs preserved in the deposit record nine assemblages that can be roughly divided into gradational subsets of wet-tolerant and dry-tolerant clusters. Assemblage distributions are highly variable but follow a general trend of increasing wetness toward the paleostream. In general, repeating sequences of wet-tolerant assemblages followed by transitional to dry-tolerant assemblages occur throughout the deposit. Wet-tolerant assemblages can be correlated with flooding events that brought nutrient-rich clays into the deposit. Variations in which of the nine assemblages are present in a specific area reflect small-scale variations in depth to water-table in the system.
See more of: Coal Geology
See more of: General Discipline Sessions