1994
DOI: 10.3133/b2085b
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Paleoecological and floristic heterogeneity in the plant-fossil record; an analysis based on the Eocene of Washington

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“…However, there has been no comparative use of compression floras in assessing past dipterocarp abundance. Compression floras often provide taxonomic resolution below the family level, and unbiased collections of fossil leaves are widely used in paleoecology to evaluate diversity and relative abundance at a far more local scale than is possible from pollen or ex-situ woods ( e.g ., Chaney & Sanborn, 1933 ; Burnham, 1994b ; Wing & DiMichele, 1995 ; Wilf, 2000 ). Significantly, relative leaf area and leaf counts in modern litter samples correlate directly with relative stem basal area in source forests ( Burnham, Wing & Parker, 1992 ; Burnham, 1994a ; Burnham, 1997 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, there has been no comparative use of compression floras in assessing past dipterocarp abundance. Compression floras often provide taxonomic resolution below the family level, and unbiased collections of fossil leaves are widely used in paleoecology to evaluate diversity and relative abundance at a far more local scale than is possible from pollen or ex-situ woods ( e.g ., Chaney & Sanborn, 1933 ; Burnham, 1994b ; Wing & DiMichele, 1995 ; Wilf, 2000 ). Significantly, relative leaf area and leaf counts in modern litter samples correlate directly with relative stem basal area in source forests ( Burnham, Wing & Parker, 1992 ; Burnham, 1994a ; Burnham, 1997 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%