Abstract
During IODP Expedition 318 (January–March 2010, Wellington to Hobart), ~2000 m of Eocene to
Quaternary sediments were recovered from the Antarctic (Wilkes Land) margin, documenting the evolution
of this margin from an ice-free “greenhouse Antarctica” to the present-day icehouse environment. Based
on a bio- and magnetostratigraphically dated, late early to early middle Eocene record recovered at Site
U1356, we have carried out palynological and organic geochemical analyses in order to gain insights
into the terrestrial environmental dynamics on Antarctica under peak greenhouse conditions.
Our preliminary palynological indicate that the vegetation along the Wilkes Land margin was highly
diverse and contains thermophilous elements that today are widely distributed in the subtropics; along
with our organic geochemical results, their presence suggests warm conditions at least in the coastal
lowlands of the Wilkes Land margin. At the same time, taxa that today are typical for cool temperate
settings are consistently present
Original language | English |
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Pages | 57-57 |
Number of pages | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 5 Jun 2011 |
Event | CBEP 2011 - Duration: 5 Jun 2011 → 8 Jun 2011 |
Conference
Conference | CBEP 2011 |
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Period | 5/06/11 → 8/06/11 |