Abstract

Middle Eocene interbasaltic deposits of Hareø, West Greenland, have yielded a rich leaf and fruit record, which was described in the second half of the nineteenth century. In this study, we describe dispersed spores and pollen from the Aumarûtigssâ Member of the Hareøen Formation in order to obtain a more comprehensive picture of the late middle Eocene vegetation of West Greenland. The spore/pollen assemblage, derived from a resinite-rich coal bed, comprises 123 taxa, of which 14 belong to mosses, ferns and fern-allies, 14 to gymnosperms, and 95 to angiosperms. The most diverse groups of angiosperms are Fagales, comprising 27 taxa, and Rosales, represented by nine taxa. Along with conifers belonging to Pinaceae, these groups reflect the temperate character of the Hareø flora. In addition, a few ‘exotic’ elements include cycads probably belonging to an extinct temperate lineage that was widespread across the Northern Hemisphere during the Paleogene, palm trees, members of Mastixioideae and Santalaceae, both of which were characteristic elements of more southern warm temperate floras of Europe. A detailed comparison with macrofossil and spore/pollen assemblages of roughly coeval sites from Axel Heiberg Island (Canada), Spitsbergen (Arctic Ocean), and ODP site 151-913B in the Norwegian-Greenland Sea, show a highly consistent picture of the vegetation during this time.

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