Palaeobotanical Repository@BSIP
 

HomePalaeobotanistVolume 53 (2004)


Title: Environmental implications of Gondwana wood studies in India
Authors: Rajanikanth, A.
Tewari, Rajni
Keywords: Wood
Gondwana
Palaeoclimate
Growth rings
Seasons
Issue Date: 2004
Citation: Palaeobotanist (2004) 53(1-3): 69-81
Abstract: A synthesis of fossil gymnospermous woods from various Gondwana basins of India is presented, and characters of growth rings in the secondary wood, particularly tracheidal cell characters, are evaluated for possible palaeoclimatic signals. Permian fossil woods are mostly recorded from the Damuda, Wardha and Pranhita-Godavari basins. Growth rings are common in many of these species and suggest strong seasonality. Triassic woods are poorly known from the South Rewa Gondwana Basin; the paucity of growth rings suggests a lack of marked seasons. Available evidence on Jurassic woods from the Pranhita-Godavari Graben indicates lack of consistency in the growth ring distribution. Early Cretaceous fossil woods recorded from the Damuda, Pranhita-Godavari, East-Coast and Kutch basins mostly show growth rings, which suggest prevalence of distinct seasons. Ecological factors coupled with phenotypic plasticity, i.e., variation with the same genotype as a function of environmental differences (genetic flexibility) probably dictated wood accumulation patterns in Indian Gondwana woods. However, palaeo-latitudinal and palaeo-physiographic constraints influenced habitats, and subsequent taphonomic processes resulted in incomplete understanding of palaeoclimate. In the absence of contemporary meteorological data during Gondwana times on what is now on the Indian continent, fossil woods constitute an important tool for understanding the past impact of climate on tree growth.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1036
Appears in Collections:Volume 53 (2004)

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
PbV53_69.pdf448.34 kBAdobe PDFView/Open
View Statistics

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

  Maintained by Knowledge Resource Centre, BSIP