Abstract

Pollen of middle Oligocene to early Miocene age from core sediments from the New Jersey Shallow Shelf (Atlantic Coastal Plain: IODP-Expedition 313, Site M0027A), was analyzed using light- and scanning electron microscopy, and a pollen-based bioclimatic analysis was performed. The microflora is dominated by Quercus pollen. Pollen ornamentations indicate that Quercus pollen most likely originated from species of sections Quercus, Lobatae, Quercus/Lobatae and aff. section Protobalanus. Eotrigonobalanus, an extinct Fagaceae lineage, was present in the coastal plain. Relative abundances of several tree taxa (e.g., Carya) did not change significantly between the Oligocene warm phases, but contrast to late middle Miocene (comprising most of the Langhian and Serravallian) records from the same area.By assigning terrestrial palynomorphs to paleovegetation units, topographic movements of these units were identified. The mesophytic forest was the most widespread and zonal vegetation type in the hinterland through the analyzed interval. Periodic changes in the relative abundances of paleovegetation units suggest altitudinal vegetation movements responding to global climate change. Observed movement signals are generally weak, but increases in bisaccate pollen, representing spread of high- and mid-latitude forest, probably reflect the onset of cold intervals such as cooling phases at ~29.1, ~28.5, and 23.5 Ma. Spread of edaphically controlled forest formations during regression phases also indicates climate change. The onset of the Mi-1 event at ~23.03 Ma is probably reflected by a decrease in pollen-inferred paleotemperatures, although the event itself occurred during a sedimentation hiatus. Pollen-based paleoclimate reconstructions indicate long-term stability in temperature and precipitation within the humid warm temperate zone.

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