A Transect through a Clastic-Swamp to Peat-Swamp Ecotone in the Springfield Coal, Middle Pennsylvanian Age of Indiana, USA
- Resource Type
- research-article
- Authors
- Phillips, Tom L.; DiMichele, William A.
- Source
- PALAIOS, 1998 Apr 01. 13(2), 113-128.
- Subject
- Coal
Peat
Swamps
Plants
Shales
Geology
Vegetation
Gynoecium
Leaves
Flora
- Language
- English
- ISSN
- 08831351
19385323
Permineralized fossil plants in coal balls were collected along a kilometer transect through an organic-rich shale in the Springfield Coal in southwestern Indiana. The organic shale is an upper bench of the Springfield Coal in an area where the coal is split into an upper and lower bench by a complex system of clastics that originated as a splay. The clastic wedge, described as the Folsomville Member/Leslie Cemetery paleochannel, is up to 6 km wide and 15 m thick. The transect begins approximately 100 m from the edge of the clastic wedge that splits the coal seam and follows the upper bench of coal over and toward the center of the clastic wedge. The dominant elements of the vegetation were the lycopsid tree Paralycopodites brevifolius and several species of medullosan pteridosperms. This report confirms the ecotonal habitats of this vegetation.