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Sunday 22 November 2015

Guess What? They Found A (Fossilized) Tropical Forest In The Arctic

A Fossil Tropical Forest Is Helping Solve an Ancient Climate Mystery
A team of scientists has unearthed the fossil remnants of a tropical forest on the arctic island of Svalbard, and, according to them, it could well  help explain what is known to be one of the most dramatic climate shifts in Earth’s history.

The fossil forest—stumps of lycopod trees that reached heights of about 13 feet—dates back to the late Devonian period, or some 380 million years ago.   Today, Svalbard, is  a frozen wasteland, but at that time was a huge area of equatorial jungle.  This is amongst some of  the oldest forests ever discovered and is eclipsed only by a mid-Devonian forest in Gilboa, New York.

The end of the Devonian was marked by a dramatic global cooling event caused by a drop in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. One explanation for the atmospheric shift is the rise of CO2-hungry forests, but to date, very few Devonian trees have actually been found.

Firm evidence for tropical forests at the end Devonian supports the theory that trees had a big role to play in the climactic shift that would usher in an era of complex terrestrial ecosystems.
A Fossil Tropical Forest Is Helping Solve an Ancient Climate Mystery
 Above: A reconstructed drawing of a Svalbard fossil forest. Image Credit: Chris Berry/ Cardiff University


“During the Devonian Period, it is widely believed that there was a huge drop in the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, from 15 times the present amount to something approaching current levels,” said Cardiff University’s Chris Berry, lead author on a study appearing this week in Geology.


“The evolution of tree-sized vegetation is the most likely cause of this dramatic drop in carbon dioxide because the plants were absorbing carbon dioxide through photosynthesis to build their tissues, and also through the process of forming soils,” he continued.

Ultimately, Devonian trees probably set the stage of land-based life as we know it.

[Read the full scientific paper at Geology h/t Atlas Obscura]

The question, though, how long before we stumble upon fossil remains of hitherto unknown species of fauna?  It's funny to think that when I read those magazine articles and books as a youngster that told how arctic and other "desolate" locations might once have been teeming with vegetation and life, those "in the know" used to mock the theories.

Only the ignorant claim we know everything about the past.

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