A comparative analysis of micro (pollen)- and macropalaeobotanical (leaves, fruits and seeds) data from selected Northern and Central Italy sites has been carried out in order to obtain an accurate interpretation of the palaeofloristic, vegetational and climatic setting for the Messinian and the Zanclean. Ancient plant communities, as reconstructed by means of this integrated approach, show the dominance of warm temperate forest taxa, with the highestfloristic affinity to the forests of Central China. "Cool temperate" taxa are scarcely represented in pollen records, with the exception of some intervals characterized by the increase in Picea and Cedrus. The overall scantiness of herbs indicates the absence of dry conditions and no open vegetation expansion. All the analytic methods applied to such palaeofloral records indicate that precipitation was sufficiently high for the persistence of a "broad-leaved evergreen/warm temperate mixed forest" from 6.0 to 3.5 Ma. For the evaporitic Messinian (ca. 5.9 to 5.6 Ma), climatic reconstructions obtained by physiognomic analysis of leaf assemblages are in agreement with those based on pollen data according to the "Climatic Amplitude Method", and indicate moist warm-temperate conditions. Accordingly, we suggest that the Adriatic-Padane basin would have been under dominant moist conditions, even during the deposition of evaporites. Slightly drier phases in post-evaporitic Messinian are suggested by the ecological preferences of some peculiar macrofossil taxa, which are, however, still associated to several arboreal plants, definitely indicating that forested environments persisted. Fluctuations in humidity are also attested by contemporary pollen records.

Messinian to Zanclean vegetation and climate of Northern and Central Italy / A. BERTINI; E. MARTINETTO. - In: BOLLETTINO DELLA SOCIETÀ PALEONTOLOGICA ITALIANA. - ISSN 0375-7633. - STAMPA. - 47(2):(2008), pp. 105-121.

Messinian to Zanclean vegetation and climate of Northern and Central Italy.

BERTINI, ADELE;
2008

Abstract

A comparative analysis of micro (pollen)- and macropalaeobotanical (leaves, fruits and seeds) data from selected Northern and Central Italy sites has been carried out in order to obtain an accurate interpretation of the palaeofloristic, vegetational and climatic setting for the Messinian and the Zanclean. Ancient plant communities, as reconstructed by means of this integrated approach, show the dominance of warm temperate forest taxa, with the highestfloristic affinity to the forests of Central China. "Cool temperate" taxa are scarcely represented in pollen records, with the exception of some intervals characterized by the increase in Picea and Cedrus. The overall scantiness of herbs indicates the absence of dry conditions and no open vegetation expansion. All the analytic methods applied to such palaeofloral records indicate that precipitation was sufficiently high for the persistence of a "broad-leaved evergreen/warm temperate mixed forest" from 6.0 to 3.5 Ma. For the evaporitic Messinian (ca. 5.9 to 5.6 Ma), climatic reconstructions obtained by physiognomic analysis of leaf assemblages are in agreement with those based on pollen data according to the "Climatic Amplitude Method", and indicate moist warm-temperate conditions. Accordingly, we suggest that the Adriatic-Padane basin would have been under dominant moist conditions, even during the deposition of evaporites. Slightly drier phases in post-evaporitic Messinian are suggested by the ecological preferences of some peculiar macrofossil taxa, which are, however, still associated to several arboreal plants, definitely indicating that forested environments persisted. Fluctuations in humidity are also attested by contemporary pollen records.
2008
47(2)
105
121
A. BERTINI; E. MARTINETTO
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/352314
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 43
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 36
social impact