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Paleobiology Commons

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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Paleobiology

The Rise Of Fire: Fossil Charcoal In Late Devonian Marine Shales As An Indicator Of Expanding Terrestrial Ecosystems, Fire, And Atmospheric Change, Susan M. Rimmer, Sarah J. Hawkins, Andrew C. Scott, Walter L. Cressler Iii Oct 2015

The Rise Of Fire: Fossil Charcoal In Late Devonian Marine Shales As An Indicator Of Expanding Terrestrial Ecosystems, Fire, And Atmospheric Change, Susan M. Rimmer, Sarah J. Hawkins, Andrew C. Scott, Walter L. Cressler Iii

Earth & Space Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Evidence Of Late Quaternary Fires From Charcoal And Siliceous Aggregates In Lake Sediments In The Eastern U.S.A., Joanne P. Ballard Aug 2015

Evidence Of Late Quaternary Fires From Charcoal And Siliceous Aggregates In Lake Sediments In The Eastern U.S.A., Joanne P. Ballard

Doctoral Dissertations

The late-glacial transition to the Holocene, 15,000–11,600 cal yr BP, is an enigmatic period of dynamic global changes and a major extinction event in North America. Fire is an agent of disturbance that transforms the environment physically and chemically, and affects plant community composition. To improve understanding of the linkages between fire, vegetation, and climate over the late glacial and Holocene in the eastern U.S., I analyzed lake-sediment cores for charcoal and indicators of wood ash, and compared results to existing pollen records. A new microscopic charcoal record from Anderson Pond, Tennessee revealed high fire activity from 23,000–15,000 cal yr …


Seeing The Forest For The Fossil Trees: Uncovering A 365-Million-Year-Old Landscape In Pennsylvania, Or, Rendezvous At Red Hill: Encounters In The Late Devonian, Walter Cressler Jan 2012

Seeing The Forest For The Fossil Trees: Uncovering A 365-Million-Year-Old Landscape In Pennsylvania, Or, Rendezvous At Red Hill: Encounters In The Late Devonian, Walter Cressler

University Libraries Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Holocene Climate And Environmental History Of Laguna Saladilla, Dominican Republic, Maria Anne Caffrey May 2011

Holocene Climate And Environmental History Of Laguna Saladilla, Dominican Republic, Maria Anne Caffrey

Doctoral Dissertations

Stratigraphic analyses of lacustrine sediments provide powerful tools for reconstructing past environments. The records that result from these analyses are key to understanding present-day climate mechanisms and how the natural environment may respond to anthropogenic climate change in the future. This doctoral dissertation research investigates climate and environmental history at Laguna Saladilla (19° [degrees] 39' N, 71° [degrees] 42' W; ca. 2 masl), a large (220 ha) lake along the north coast of Hispaniola. I reconstructed changes in vegetation and environmental conditions over the mid to late Holocene based on pollen, microscopic charcoal, and diatoms in an 8.51 m sediment …


Late Devonian Spermatophyte Diversity And Paleoecology At Red Hill, North-Central Pennsylvania, U.S.A., Walter L. Cressler Iii, Cyrille Prestianni, Ben A. Lepage Jan 2010

Late Devonian Spermatophyte Diversity And Paleoecology At Red Hill, North-Central Pennsylvania, U.S.A., Walter L. Cressler Iii, Cyrille Prestianni, Ben A. Lepage

Earth & Space Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Plant Paleoecology Of The Late Devonian Red Hill Locality, North-Central Pennsylvania, An Archaeopteris-Dominated Wetland Plant Community And Early Tetrapod Site., Walter L. Cressler Iii Jan 2006

Plant Paleoecology Of The Late Devonian Red Hill Locality, North-Central Pennsylvania, An Archaeopteris-Dominated Wetland Plant Community And Early Tetrapod Site., Walter L. Cressler Iii

Earth & Space Sciences Faculty Publications

The Late Devonian Red Hill locality in north-central Pennsylvania contains an Archaeopteris-dominated plant fossil assemblage, a diverse fossil fauna, and an extensive sedimentary sequence ideal for investigating the landscapes and biotic associations of the earliest forest ecosystems. Sedimentological analysis of the main plantfossil bearing layer at Red Hill indicates that it was a fl ood-plain pond. A seasonal wet-and-dry climate is indicated by well-developed paleovertisols. The presence of charcoal interspersed with plant fossils indicates that fi res occurred in this landscape.Fires appear to have primarily affected the fern Rhacophyton. The specifi city of the fires, the distribution profi …


Evidence Of Earliest Known Wildfires, Walter L. Cressler Iii Apr 2001

Evidence Of Earliest Known Wildfires, Walter L. Cressler Iii

Earth & Space Sciences Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.