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MikePole
Travelling to understand time and place

Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

Palaeobotany uses fossil plants to reconstruct past environments and ecosystems. However, one of its most important functions is to  reconstruct palaeoclimate – for times when no direct measurements exist. Leaves, wood, pollen, and whole fossil floras preserve information about temperature, rainfall, seasonality, and atmospheric conditions, but that information is always filtered through biology, ecology, and taphonomy.

Posts in this category particular fossil floras, and highlight some of the plants found within them – and show how they are used as climate proxies. Specific case studies range from New Zealand’s Jurassic fossil forests at Curio Bay, to the Miocene Manuherikia Group, as well as elsewhere. But the broader aim is methodological: how reliably can fossil plants tell us about past climates, and what happens when different lines of evidence disagree?

Together, these posts form a connected body of work on reconstructing deep-time environments, mainly through plants – combining field work, quantitative methods, and critical evaluation of published palaeoclimate work.

  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Five Degrees of Global Warming – The Leaf Fossils of Kakahu, New Zealand

    by Mike Pole November 27, 2015
    by Mike Pole November 27, 2015

    Sometime in the 1980s my Prof, ‘JDC’ (Doug Campbell of the Otago University), showed me a box of spectacular leaf fossils that …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    The Giant ‘Lake Manuherikia’ – an extinct lake from the New Zealand Miocene

    by Mike Pole October 17, 2015
    by Mike Pole October 17, 2015

    Alexandra lies at the junction of the Clutha and Manuherikia Rivers. The usual translation of the Maori word ‘Manuherikia’ is that it means …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Where was the Murihiku in the Jurassic?

    by Mike Pole July 21, 2015
    by Mike Pole July 21, 2015

    A few years ago I used to teach American classes that came to the University of Queensland. One evening my Stanford class …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Globalisation in the Jurassic – the fossil fern Coniopteris in New Zealand

    by Mike Pole July 8, 2015
    by Mike Pole July 8, 2015

    One of the plant fossils that turns up in New Zealand’s Jurassic rocks is a delicate-looking fern frond called Coniopteris (Arber, 1917; …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Palissya – mysterious cone of New Zealand’s Jurassic forests

    by Mike Pole May 28, 2015
    by Mike Pole May 28, 2015

    In the early 1980s when I was working on the Jurassic fossil forest of Curio Bay, near the bottom end of New Zealand’s …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Almost a Holocaust – the latest Triassic, Pollock Road, New Zealand

    by Mike Pole February 28, 2015
    by Mike Pole February 28, 2015

    What a difference nearly thirty years makes. In 1986 the Prof of Geology at Otago University showed me some recently collected plant …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Cabin Fever and Paleocene leaf fossils in the Haast

    by Mike Pole January 23, 2015
    by Mike Pole January 23, 2015

    Easter, 1971. The family is holed-up in a tiny home-made caravan at Cole Creek, in New Zealand’s forest-clad South Westland just north …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    The Fossil Palm Swamps of Central Otago, New Zealand

    by Mike Pole October 30, 2014
    by Mike Pole October 30, 2014

    One of the endearing memories I have during my PhD was working on the banks above the Kawarau River near Cromwell (Central …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    Supplejack – a survivor from the Miocene in New Zealand

    by Mike Pole October 8, 2014
    by Mike Pole October 8, 2014

    The first time I ever slept-out (sleeping bag, no tent), I was about four years old, and the place was an idyllic …

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  • Palaeobotany & Palaeoclimate

    The Kai Point Coal Mine – Late Cretaceous vegetation treasure-trove

    by Mike Pole September 27, 2014
    by Mike Pole September 27, 2014

    The lowlands south of Dunedin (New Zealand), used to be almost impassable wetlands. The local Maoris were incredulous when the first Western …

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MikePole
  • Home
  • About me
  • Contact me
  • Categories
    • Curio Bay – New Zealand’s Jurassic Fossil Forest
    • New Zealand Geology
    • Supernatural
  • Places
    • Australia
    • Armenia
    • Bosnia
    • Brazil
    • Canary Island
    • China
    • Indonesia
    • Turkey
    • Estonia
    • France
    • Georgia
    • Germany
    • Lebanon
    • Mexico
    • Mongolia
    • Kazakhstan
    • Russia
    • Uganda
    • New Zealand
    • India
    • South Africa