Abstract

The recent geological history of the Northern Andes is characterized by the interaction of dynamic surface processes such as volcanic activity, fluvial erosion, mass movements, etc. that have shaped landscapes for millennia. Despite its great geological and biological importance, the long-term ecological history of middle-elevation tropical habitats (between 1000 and 2500 m.a.s.l.) is unknown, due to the scarcity of suitable paleo archives preserving the paleoecological signal, leading to a critical data gap. This manuscript reports well-preserved subfossil woods of the Pleistocene volcanoclastic deposits from the Central Cordillera of Colombia. Four wood specimens are described and identified as Terminalioxylon gumminae sp.nov., Andesanthus risaraldense sp.nov., Anacardium quindiuense sp.nov., and Chrysochlamys colombiana. This report demonstrates the potential of volcanic deposits in the Northern Andes as paleo archives, and contributes to the fossil record of the tropical Andes, as it contains elements of mid-altitude vegetation preserved in association with the Pleistocene volcanic activity of the Central Cordillera. The environments where these subfossil species lived resemble present environmental conditions. This is a baseline for future paleobotanical exploration and paleoenvironmental analyses.

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