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Arctic Terrestrial Biota: Paleomagnetic Evidence of Age Disparity with Mid-Northern Latitudes During the Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary
125
Citations
18
References
1983
Year
EngineeringLiving FossilFossil Land PlantsEarth ScienceSocial SciencesPaleoenvironmental ChangeBiogeographyCretaceous PeriodPleistoceneGeochronologyEureka Sound FormationMarine GeologyAge DisparityMagnetostratigraphic CorrelationGeographyGeologyCryospherePaleoclimatologyPaleomagnetic EvidenceArctic StructureEvolutionary BiologyArctic Terrestrial BiotaCretaceous-paleogene BoundaryPaleoecologyQuaternary Period
Magnetostratigraphic correlation of the Eureka Sound Formation in the Canadian high Arctic reveals profound difference between the time of appearance of fossil land plants and vertebrates in the Arctic and in mid-northern latitudes. Latest Cretaceous plant fossils in the Arctic predate mid-latitude occurrences by as much as 18 million years, while typical Eocene vertebrate fossils appear some 2 to 4 million years early.
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