Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T06:48:59.699Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

XII.—On Salpingostoma dasu: A New Carboniferous Seed from East Lothian

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2017

W. T. Gordon
Affiliation:
Professor of Geology, University of London, King's College.

Extract

In a recent paper (Gordon, 1938) reasons were given for the belief that semi-arid conditions prevailed during Lower Carboniferous times in the neighbourhood of North Berwick, East Lothian. The evidence was opposed, in a measure, to that advanced by Mr George Barrow in the East Lothian Memoir (1910) to substantiate the same position. He had relied on the absence of fossils as part proof; but, in point of fact, fossil plants have been obtained in abundance from the actual bedded ashes of Oxroad Bay that he considered (a) to be unfossiliferous, and (b) to have been formed in a manner similar to beds on the Springbok Flats of the Transvaal. The plants that have now been obtained showed xerophytic features, and, consequently, a semi-arid climate was proved on positive evidence. Other positive evidence of a lithological character was also presented in confirmation (Gordon, 1938, pp. 352, 353).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1942

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES TO LITERATURE

Arber, E. A. N., 1905. “On some New Species of Lagenostoma,” Proc. Roy. Soc., B, vol. lxxvi, p. 245.Google Scholar
Arber, E. A. N., 1914. “A Revision of the Seed Impressions of the British Coal Measures,” Ann. Bot., vol. xxviii, p. 81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arber, E. A. N., and Goode, R. H., 1915. “On some Fossil Plants from the Devonian Rocks of North Devon,” Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc., vol. xviii.Google Scholar
Arnold, C. A., 1938. “Palæozoic Seeds,” Bot. Rev., vol. iv, p. 205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrow, G., 1910. “Geology of East Lothian,” Mem. Geol. Surv. of Great Britain.Google Scholar
Benson, M. J., 1904. “Telangium Scotti,” Ann. Bot., vol. xviii, p. 161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benson, M. J., 1914. “Sphaerostoma ovale, a Lower Carboniferous Ovule from Pettycur,” Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. 1, p. 1.Google Scholar
Benson, M. J., 1935. “The Fructification Calathiops Bernhardti, n.sp.,” Ann. Bot., vol. xlix, p. 155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertrand, C. E., 1908 (1). “Les caractéristiques du Cycadinocarpus augustodunensis,” Bull. Soc. Bot. France, sèr. 4, vol. viii, p. 326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertrand, C. E., 1908 (2). “Les caractéristiques du Genre Cardiocarpus,” Bull. Soc. Bot. France, sér. 4, vol. viii, p. 391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertrand, C. E., 1908 (3). “La spécification des Cardiocarpus de la collection B. Renault,” Bull. Soc. Bot. France, sér. 4, vol. viii, p. 454.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brongniart, A., 1881. “Les graines fossiles silicificées,” Paris. Memorial Volume by B. Renault.Google Scholar
Calder, M. G., 1938. “On some Undescribed Species from the Lower Carboniferous Flora of Berwickshire,” Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. lix, p. 309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carpentier, A., 1929. “Empreintes de fructifications trouvées en 1929 dans le Westphalien du Nord de la France,” Rev. Gén. Bot., vol. xli.Google Scholar
Dix, E., 1932. “On a Sporocarp probably attached to a Frond of Neuropteris schlehani, Stur,” Ann. Bot., vol. xlvi, p. 1064.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goodchild, J. G., 1897. “Remarks on a Recent Boring for Water at North Berwick,” Trans. Geol. Soc Edin., vol. vii, p. 236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Göppert, H. R., 1865. “Die fossile Flora der Permischen Formation,” Palœontographica, vol. xii, Cassel.Google Scholar
Gordon, W. T., 1910. “On a New Species of Physostoma from the Lower Carboniferous Rocks of Pettycur,” Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc., vol. xv, pt. v, p. 395.Google Scholar
Gordon, W. T., 1938. “On Tetrastichia bupatides: a Carboniferous Pteridosperm from East Lothian,” Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. lix, p. 351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halle, T. G., 1933. The Structure of Certain Fossil Spore-bearing Organs believed to belong to Pteridosperms, Stockholm.Google Scholar
Heer, O., 1876. “Beitrage zur Fossilen Flora Spitzbergens,” Kongl. Svenska Vet-Akad. Hand., Bd. xiv.Google Scholar
Kidston, R., 1914. “The South Staffordshire Coalfield,” Trans. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. 1, pp. 73190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nathorst, A. G., 1914. Zur Fossilen Flora der Polaränder, Teil 1, Lief, iv, Stockholm.Google Scholar
Noé, A. C., 1925. “Pennsylvanian Flora of Northern Illinois,” Illinois State Geol. Surv., Bull. 52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, F. W., 1909. “On Physostoma elegans, Williamson,” Ann. Bot., vol. xxiii, p. 73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, F. W., and Salisbury, E. J., 1911. “On the Structure and Affinities of the Palæozoic Seeds of the Conostoma Group,” Ann. Bot., vol. xxv, p. 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, F. W., and Scott, D. H., 1904. “On the Structure of the Palæozoic Seed Lagenostoma lomaxi,” Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc., vol. cxcvii, p. 193.Google Scholar
Pearson, H. H. W., 1929. The Gnetales, Camb. Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Prankerd, T. L., 1912. “On the Structure of the Palæozoic Seed Lagenostoma ovoides,” Linn. Journ. Bot., vol. xl.Google Scholar
Pringle, R., 1935. “British Regional Geology. The South of Scotland,” Geol. Surv. and Museum.Google Scholar
Pruvost, P., 1919. La Faune Gontinentale du Terrain Houiller du Nord de la France, Paris.Google Scholar
Reed, Fredda D., 1939. “Structure of some Carboniferous Seeds from American Coal Fields,” Bot. Gaz., vol. c, p. 769.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Renault, B., 1885. Cours de Botanique Fossile, Paris.Google Scholar
Schimper, W. P., 18691874. Traité de Paléontologie végétale, Paris.Google Scholar
Schmalhausen, J., 1883. “Die Pflanzenreste der Steinkohlenformation am östhchen Abhange des Ural-Gebirges,” Mém. Acad. S. Pétersbourg, sér. vii, vol. xxxi.Google Scholar
Scourfield, D. J., 1940. “The oldest known Fossil Insect,” Proc. Linn. Soc., Session 152, p. 113; Nature, vol, cxlv, p. 799.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sellards, E. H., 1903. “Codonotheca, a New Type of Spore-bearing Organ from the Coal Measures,” Amer. Journ. Sci., 4th ser., vol. xvi, p. 87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sellards, E. H., 1907. “Notes on the Spore-bearing Organ Codonotheca,” New Phytologist, vol. vi, p. 175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seward, A. C., 1917. Fossil Plants, vol. iii, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Seward, A. C., 1933. “Note on two Upper Carboniferous Pteridosperms from Kentucky,” Brittonia, vol. 1, no. 4, p. 195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stopes, Marie C., 1914. “The ‘Fern Ledges’ Carboniferous Flora of St John, New Brunswick,” Dept. of Mines, Geol. Surv. Canada, mem. 41, no. 38.Google Scholar
Walton, J., 1931. “Contributions to the Knowledge of Lower Carboniferous Plants. III. On the Fossil Flora of the Black Limestone in Teilia Quarry, Flintshire,” Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc., vol. ccxix, p. 347.Google Scholar
Walton, J., 1940. Introduction to the Study of Fossil Plants, London.Google Scholar
Walton, J., and Koopmans, R. G., 1928. “A Method of preparing Sections of Fossil Plants,” Nature, p. 571.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, W. C., 1877. “On the Organisation of the Fossil Plants of the Coal Measures,” Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc., vol. clxvii.Google Scholar