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Historical Biology
An International Journal of Paleobiology
Volume 10, 1995 - Issue 1
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Original Articles

Differing Eocene floral histories in Southeastern North America and Western Europe: Influence of paleogeography

Pages 13-23 | Received 15 Sep 1993, Published online: 10 Jan 2009
 

Abstract

Pollen data show that in southeastern North America, the Eocene angiosperm flora attained its maximum relative diversity some 8 m.y. after the late early Eocene to earliest middle Eocene climatic maximum. Increasing diversity resulted in part from the flora's position on a large continent which allowed easy migration. In western Europe, the floral diversity began decreasing even before the climatic maximum. Paleogeography played large roles in this diversity decrease. In western Europe, terrestrial floras were on islands and peninsulas in the sea, so that the floras underwent increasing isolation and partial local extermination. Temperate plants generally did not migrate to western Europe, because of a lack of nearby uplands, lack of northern terrestrial source areas for these plants, and presence of the Turgai Straights barrier. The Eocene climate of western Europe cooled at least partly because of decreasing contact with the warm Tethys Seaway.

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