Abstract

This paper introduces two new Miocene fossil forest sites in northwest Turkey. Both sites lie at an altitude of ~900m close to the town of Seben in the province of Bolu. One locality is near the village of Hoçaş; the second lies 17km to the northwest of the village of Kozyaka. The silicified wood represents lower parts of trunks that were felled by an eruption associated with volcanic activity in the Galatean Volcanic Province. The Hoçaş site yielded a total of 64 samples (51 in situ and 13 ex situ). Eight in situ trunks have been identified as Salix L./Populus L., Palmae, Juniperus L., Liquidambar L. and Quercus L. (evergreen); ex situ Cedrus Trew., Picea Mill. and Acer L. were found lying on the surface of the soil. The Kozyaka site yielded a total of 26 samples (six in situ, 20 ex situ) including Cedrus, Pinus L., Acer, Salix/Populus, evergreen Quercus and Ulmus L. Today in Turkey these genera grow in coastal locations across a narrow altitudinal range. Collating data found herein with evidence from previous studies suggests that during the early Miocene subtropical to warm temperate conditions prevailed that supported a lakeside vegetation at the Hoçaş site and a more typical upland or mountainous zone assemblage around the Kozyaka site.

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