Tree rings, which record annual growth, also reveal the growing conditions of trees. A researcher at the Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument carefully measured tree rings in fossil wood (Sequoioxylon pearsallii) and noted a larger (40%) average tree-ring width than the modern redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) and giant Sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum) growing along the northern California coast. The significant difference in mean ring width between modern and extinct redwoods suggests the ancient redwoods in the Florissant Valley were growing under more favorable conditions than their modern counterparts.
It is thought that there was more precipitation, from moist Pacific Ocean air,that reached the western interior as the Sierra Nevada mountains of California had not yet been uplifted to block the flow of moist air. More precipitation, resulting from these moist air masses, would have fallen during the growing season.
Precipitation at Florissant during the late Eocene is estimated at about 50 – 80 centimeters of annual rainfall, greater than the modern precipitation of 38 centimeters. A higher level of atmospheric CO2, perhaps twice that of modern levels, may have contributed to the favorable growing conditions in the Florissant Valley of the late Eocene.
A subsequent volcanic mudflow moved across the ancient paleovalley, forming a dam of mud, rocks, boulders, and associated debris. A stream, running over earlier mudflows, began to back up behind the mud dam, eventually forming a large lake—Lake Florissant. Leaf and insect fossils were preserved in this lake.
Not only are the Sequoia stumps preserved, but Sequoia cones and foliage are also represented in the fossil record at Florissant. The cones and foliage are found separated from the tree, and have a separate classification from the fossil wood. Sequoia affinis cones are found as fossils in the thinly bedded shales of ancient Lake Florissant. The ovoid cones are made of spirally arranged scales and tend to be smaller (about two-thirds the size) than the modern coast redwood cones.
Fossil branches of the Specimen FLFO-4858 from the collection of Image date Oct 2003 by S. Veatch. |
Sequoia affinis cones. Specimen FLFO-4717 from the collection of Image date Oct 2003 by S. Veatch. |
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