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3/21/2017 TheAmazingMioceneFossilLeafPackofMataCreek,NewZealandMikePole

MikePole

December 28, 2016 / comment 0 / Edit

TheAmazingMioceneFossilLeafPackofMataCreek,New
Zealand

I was crouched in a long boat somewhere up a rainforest-swathed river in Kalimatan, Borneo, when I
saw it a living example of a fossil leaf pack I had once seen in New Zealand.

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Our long boat is pulled up on the bank of a rainforested stream deep in Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) while
others pass by.

Several years before, I had been exploring down a little stream near St Bathans, New Zealand. I was
looking for leaf fossils in sediments of an ancient river. The geological unit is a faulted mix of the St
Bathans and Fiddlers Members (Douglas 1986) of the Manuherikia Group. This was deposited in the
Miocene, about 20 million years ago, by rivers thatmeandered across a landscape that didnt have
the high topography of today,

In a low cut-bank of Mata Creek a layer had been exposed that looked like a stack of old newspapers
charred by re on their edges. Sandwiching this, above and below, was the more typical white sand
laid down by the Fiddlers Member rivers.

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A Miocene fossil leaf pack thousands of fossil leaves compacted together in the bank of Mata Creek, near St
Bathans, New Zealand.

The magic happened back in the lab. What looked like akes of old newspaper, were in fact fossil
leaves along with some small twigs. Long and gentle treatment with bleach turned the dark, opaque
fragments into beautiful, golden and translucent specimens (see featured image). The stack of
newspapers was in fact, a solid Miocene leaf pack hundreds and hundreds of fossil leaves, all
compressed together. Preservation was so good, that the outlines of epidermal cells could be seen
under a microscope.

Many of these fossil leaves belong to the laurel family. They do not grow this far south in New
Zealand today (its too cold), a good indication that in the Miocene, New Zealand was warmer than
today. Some of the laurel leaves are tripli-veined, with three large veins radiating near the leaf base.
This kind of laurel leaf is not found in New Zealand at all today, but is common in some other
rainforests, in Australia for example.

The long boats of Kalimantan are ideal for navigating the little rivers or streams of the rainforest.
They have a propeller that is barely submerged, making it possible to skim over shallows or
submerged logs. They arent that conformable, and their engines usually arent mufed. After an hour
or so of squatting on a wooden beam (or none at all), I was generally looking for any excuse to get out.
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A leaf pack extending into the river on a point bar in Kalimantan.

It was on one of these trips that I spotted a real, recently-made leaf pack. We were roaring along the
discoloured water, almost covered by a canopy of rainforest trees, when I noticed a clear patch of the
bank. Instead of being a densely vegetated green, it was dark grey, and had a layered appearance. We
had the boat turned around and pulled up alongside. It was a huge mass of leaves and twigs,
separated by a smaller amountof silt. This was a perfect recent analogy of the fossil deposit thatI had
found in Mata Creek.

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Close up view of a leaf pack on the point bar of a river in Kalimantan. A little below an to the left of the upper hand
is a leaf very similar to the Miocene fossil shown in the featured image.

The best part was that I could now actuallysee just where aleaf mat occurred in the river system,
and how it had formed. The leaf mat was on a point bar. These are the inner parts of the meanders in
a meandering river. While the outer part of the meander loop cuts into its bank, the inner part grows
by dropping sediment and in this case, leaves.

Diagram illustrating where point bars (the yellow)


occur in a meandering river. Arrows indicate the
current direction. Fossil leaf mats can be
deposited on these point bars.
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Vast amounts of leaves are dropped into the river from the rainforest canopy. During oods, the
leaves tend to get sorted from the silt because of their lower density and bigger size. When the
currents drop, on the point bars, a layer of almost nothing butleaves can be deposited on normal
point bar sand. Then, if the next ood doesnt wash it away, it can be covered with a layer of sand
and a fossil leaf pack is in the making.

A view of another leaf mat, this one more clearly showing it has been covered by a layer of white sand.

Im a great fan of trying to see living examples of what you come across in the geological record. In
this case it made a welcome relief for a sore butt sitting in a Kalimantan long boat.

References

Links will take you to a site to download pdfs of the papers.

Douglas, B. J. 1986. Lignite resources of Central Otago. New Zealand Energy Research and
Development Committee Publication P104: Volume one, Volume 2.

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Pole, M.S., 1993. Early Miocene ora of the Manuherikia Group, New Zealand. 6. Lauraceae. Journal
of the Royal Society of New Zealand 23, 303-312.

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Filed under: New Zealand plant fossils

Tagged: Central Otago, fossils, geology, Indonesia, Kalimantan, Miocene, New Zealand, New Zealand paleobotany,
New Zealand plant fossils, rainforest

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