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1 October 2008 A Morphotype Catalogue, Floristic Analysis and Stratigraphic Description of the Aspen Shale Flora(Cretaceous–Albian) of Southwestern Wyoming
Daniel J. Peppe, Leo J. Hickey, Ian M. Miller, Walton A. Green
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Abstract

We describe 28 fossil plant morphotypes from the Aspen Shale flora (Cretaceous: middle to late Albian) in southwestern Wyoming. This impression flora includes 6 ferns, 1 sphenopsid, 2 conifers, 17 dicotyledonous angiosperm (dicot) leaves and 2 dicot reproductive structures. The Aspen Shale megaflora is most similar to that of Subzone IIB of the Potomac Group of the eastern United States. Analysis of the Aspen Shale sedimentology and botanical composition shows occupation of open, paludal sites by a succession of progressively more complex plant communities. Like other middle Cretaceous floras, these data suggest that early angiosperms were weedy, herbaceous to shrubby, early successional competitors to ferns on open substrates. The description and illustration of the Aspen Shale morphotypes is presented as an example of how an entire flora can be described and analyzed before full taxonomic determinations have been made.

Daniel J. Peppe, Leo J. Hickey, Ian M. Miller, and Walton A. Green "A Morphotype Catalogue, Floristic Analysis and Stratigraphic Description of the Aspen Shale Flora(Cretaceous–Albian) of Southwestern Wyoming," Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History 49(2), 181-208, (1 October 2008). https://doi.org/10.3374/0079-032X-49.2.181
Received: 24 January 2008; Accepted: 1 May 2008; Published: 1 October 2008
KEYWORDS
Albian
Aspen Shale
early angiosperm
Early Cretaceous
early succession
floral catalogue
morphotype
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