The Early Carboniferous (Courceyan–Arundian) climate of the British Isles: evidence from growth rings in fossil woods

Falcon-Lang, Howard J.

(1999)

Falcon-Lang, Howard J. (1999) The Early Carboniferous (Courceyan–Arundian) climate of the British Isles: evidence from growth rings in fossil woods. Geological Magazine, 136 (2).

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Abstract

The British Isles lay at a palaeolatitude of 4°S during the Early Carboniferous (Courceyan–Arundian) period. This paper examines fossil gymnosperm wood from ten localities in western Ireland and southern Scotland in order to analyse palaeoclimate. Fifty-two percent of the 77 fossil wood specimens studied exhibit growth rings that possess subtle, discontinuous ring boundaries and ring increments of narrow but variable width. These growth rings are qualitatively and quantitatively analysed, and are shown to bear a close similarity to growth rings in modern araucarian conifer woods; these araucarian growth rings are formed in response to tropical rainfall seasonality linked to monsoonal circulation. The findings of this study therefore support earlier palaeoclimatic interpretations, based on sedimentological evidence, which suggest that the British Isles experienced a monsoonal climate during the Early Carboniferous (Courceyan–Arundian) period.

Information about this Version

This is a Published version
This version's date is: 03/1999
This item is peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/d3c6ebaf-bdca-84d6-18ee-2808bdae179b/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleThe Early Carboniferous (Courceyan–Arundian) climate of the British Isles: evidence from growth rings in fossil woods
AuthorsFalcon-Lang, Howard J.
Uncontrolled KeywordsEarly Carboniferous (Courceyan–Arundian) period, fossil gymnosperm wood, palaeoclimate, Ireland, Scotland, growth ring
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Earth Sciences

Identifiers

doi10.1017/S0016756899002307

Deposited by () on 23-Dec-2009 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 23-Dec-2009

Notes

Copyright 1999 Cambridge University Press, whose kind permission to post the final published version here is acknowledged.


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