Plant fossils in the Cassian beds and other Carnian formations of the Eastern Southern Alps (Italy)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2011
Abstract:
Triassic macrofloras in the Southern Alps are rare, and the majority of literature data is devoted to Ladinian plants.
The first plant remain from the Southern Alps, a not better defined "fern fragment", has been illustrated by Wissmann
and Münster (1841). Later, several authors mentioned and figured plant fossils from the so-called "Buchensteiner
Schichten", "Wengener Schichten" and "alpiner Muschelkalk" of the Dolomites (e.g., Mojsisovics, 1879; Ogilvie Gordon,
1927, 1934; Leonardi, 1953; for an overview see Wachtler & van Konijnenburg-van Cittert, 2000). Only Koken
(1913) indicated badly preserved plant remains from the Heiligkreuz Schichten without describing or figuring them.
Outside the Dolomites, only two more localities rich in Triassic plant remains were known: the Anisian flora of Recoaro
(e.g., De Zigno, 1862; Schenk, 1868) and the Carnian flora of Raibl/Cave del Predil (e.g., Bronn, 1858; Schenk,
1866-7, Stur, 1868, 1885).
In the last few years several outcrops were found, yielding well-preserved plant fossils, some of them are Carnian in
age such as Dogna in the Julian Alps, Stuores near Corvara, Heiligkreuz near Badia and Rifugio Dibona section near
Cortina in the Dolomites. These floras, together with the Raibl flora, give a nice overview on the Carnian floras of the
Southern Alps.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Paleontology; carnian formations; eastern southern Alps; Italy
Elenco autori:
Roghi, Guido
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