- cross-posted to:
- palaeoecology
- cross-posted to:
- palaeoecology
Fossilized trees discovered by chance in southwest England belong to Earth’s earliest-known forest, new research has found. The 390 million-year-old fossils supplant the Gilboa fossil forest in New York state, which dates back 386 million years, as the world’s oldest known forest.
The new discovery highlights differences between the two ecosystems, suggesting forests went from being relatively primitive to well established over the course of just a few million years, said Neil Davies, the lead author of a new study published Feb. 23 in the Journal of the Geological Society.
“Why it’s important — broadly — is it ticks the boxes of being the oldest fossil forest,” Davies, a professor in the Department of Earth Sciences at the University of Cambridge in the U.K., told Live Science. The finding is also remarkable because it reveals stark differences between the complex array of ancient plants found at Gilboa and the newly discovered forest, which appears to have hosted just one type of plant, Davies said.
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Davies and his colleagues stumbled upon the forest remnants during fieldwork in the Hangman Sandstone Formation, which dates to the Middle Devonian period (393 million to 383 million years ago). During the Devonian period, what is now the U.K. formed part of a continent called Laurentia that sat just below the equator, meaning the climate was warm and dry, Davies said.
Older trees exist elsewhere in the world, with plants first colonizing land 500 million years ago, but this new discovery is the earliest example of a forest with trees growing close together and en masse.
“We’ve found rocks where you’ve got standing trees in growth positions adjacent to each other over a set area,” Davies said, “so we’re looking at a snapshot where we can tell for definite that there were trees growing in that specific location and that the sediment we’re looking at is the forest floor.”
Among the fossil trees, the researchers found trackways belonging to small Devonian critters. “At this time, there’s nothing much bigger than lots of little arthropods knocking around on land,” Davies said. “You might find some more amphibian-type things and fish in some of the lakes and rivers nearby.”