Palaeobotanical evidence for a marked temperature increase following the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary

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Abstract

Correspondence analysis of dicot leaf physiognomy of modern vegetational samples from a wide range of environments indicates that >70% of physiognomic variation corresponds to water or temperature factors, or both. Despite wide variation in single physiognomic characters, overall trends can be used to distinguish between samples from different climates. Some climate parameters are well correlated with changes in physiognomy, so that climate characteristics can be inferred from physiognomic analyses. Here I apply this climate–leaf analysis multivariate program (CLAMP) to leaf assemblages from the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary. The results indicate a fourfold increase in precipitation at the boundary and an increase in mean annual temperature of 10°C. These levels persisted for 0.5–1.0 Myr, after which preá-cipitation decreased to about three times the values for the latest Cretaceous, and the mean annual temperature decreased to 5–6°C above latest Cretaceous values.

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Palaeobotanical evidence for a marked temperature increase following the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary
Series title Nature
DOI 10.1038/343153a0
Volume 343
Issue 6254
Year Published 1990
Language English
Publisher Springer Nature
Description 4 p.
First page 153
Last page 156
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