Hubbry Logo
PaleocenePaleoceneMain
Open search
Paleocene
Community hub
Paleocene
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Contribute something
Paleocene
Paleocene
from Wikipedia

Paleocene
66 – 56 Ma
A map of Earth as it appeared 60 million years ago during the Paleocene Epoch, Selandian Age
Chronology
−66 —
−65 —
−64 —
−63 —
−62 —
−61 —
−60 —
−59 —
−58 —
−57 —
−56 —
 
 
 
Ages of the Paleocene Epoch, according to the ICS as of
January 2020.[1]
Axis scale: millions of years ago.
Etymology
Name formalityFormal
Name ratified1978
Alternate spelling(s)Palaeocene
Usage information
Regional usageGlobal (ICS)
Time scale(s) usedICS Time Scale
Definition
Chronological unitEpoch
Stratigraphic unitSeries
First proposed byWilhelm Philipp Schimper, 1874
Time span formalityFormal
Lower boundary definitionIridium enriched layer associated with a major meteorite impact and subsequent K–Pg extinction event[2]
Lower boundary GSSPEl Kef Section, El Kef, Tunisia
36°09′13″N 8°38′55″E / 36.1537°N 8.6486°E / 36.1537; 8.6486[2]
Lower GSSP ratified1991[2]
Upper boundary definitionStrong negative anomaly in δ13C values at the PETM[3]
Upper boundary GSSPDababiya section, Luxor, Egypt[3]
25°30′00″N 32°31′52″E / 25.5000°N 32.5311°E / 25.5000; 32.5311
Upper GSSP ratified2003[3]

The Paleocene (IPA: /ˈpæli.əsn, -i.-, ˈpli-/ PAL-ee-ə-seen, -⁠ee-oh-, PAY-lee-),[4] or Palaeocene, is a geological epoch that lasted from about 66 to 56 Ma (million years ago).[5] It is the first epoch of the Paleogene Period in the modern Cenozoic Era. The name comes from Ancient Greek παλαιός (palaiós), meaning "old", and καινός (kainós), meaning "new", translating to "the old part of the Eocene".

The epoch is bracketed by two major events in Earth's history. The K–Pg extinction event, brought on by an asteroid impact (Chicxulub impact) and possibly volcanism (Deccan Traps), marked the beginning of the Paleocene and killed off 75% of species, most famously the non-avian dinosaurs. The end of the epoch was marked by the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), which was a major climatic event wherein about 2,500–4,500 gigatons of carbon were released into the atmosphere and ocean systems, causing a spike in global temperatures and ocean acidification.

In the Paleocene, the continents of the Northern Hemisphere were still connected via some land bridges; and South America, Antarctica, and Australia had not completely separated yet. The Rocky Mountains were being uplifted, the Americas had not yet joined, the Indian Plate had begun its collision with Asia, and the North Atlantic Igneous Province was forming in the third-largest magmatic event of the last 150 million years. In the oceans, the thermohaline circulation probably was much different from what it is today, with downwellings occurring in the North Pacific rather than the North Atlantic, and water density mainly being controlled by salinity rather than temperature.

The K–Pg extinction event caused a floral and faunal turnover of species, with previously abundant species being replaced by previously uncommon ones. In the Paleocene, with a global average temperature of about 24–25 °C (75–77 °F), compared to 14 °C (57 °F) in more recent times, the Earth had a greenhouse climate without permanent ice sheets at the poles, like the preceding Mesozoic. As such, there were forests worldwide—including at the poles—but they had low species richness in regards to plant life, and were populated by mainly small creatures that were rapidly evolving to take advantage of the recently emptied Earth. Though some animals attained great size, most remained rather small. The forests grew quite dense in the general absence of large herbivores. Mammals proliferated in the Paleocene, and the earliest placental and marsupial mammals are recorded from this time, but most Paleocene taxa have ambiguous affinities. In the seas, ray-finned fish rose to dominate open ocean and recovering reef ecosystems.

Etymology

[edit]
A realistic black-and-white portrait of Schimper, who had a full beard and mustache, sideburns, a receding hairline, and is dressed in a formal jacket and bowtie
Wilhelm Philipp Schimper coined the term "Paleocene".

The word "Paleocene" was first used by French paleobotanist and geologist Wilhelm Philipp Schimper in 1874 while describing deposits near Paris (spelled "Paléocène" in his treatise).[6][7] By this time, Italian geologist Giovanni Arduino had divided the history of life on Earth into the Primary (Paleozoic), Secondary (Mesozoic), and Tertiary in 1759; French geologist Jules Desnoyers had proposed splitting off the Quaternary from the Tertiary in 1829;[8] and Scottish geologist Charles Lyell (ignoring the Quaternary) had divided the Tertiary Epoch into the Eocene, Miocene, Pliocene, and New Pliocene (Holocene) Periods in 1833.[9][n 1] British geologist John Phillips had proposed the Cenozoic in 1840 in place of the Tertiary,[10] and Austrian paleontologist Moritz Hörnes had introduced the Paleogene for the Eocene and Neogene for the Miocene and Pliocene in 1853.[11] After decades of inconsistent usage, the newly formed International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS), in 1969, standardized stratigraphy based on the prevailing opinions in Europe: the Cenozoic Era subdivided into the Tertiary and Quaternary sub-eras, and the Tertiary subdivided into the Paleogene and Neogene Periods.[12] In 1978, the Paleogene was officially defined as the Paleocene, Eocene, and Oligocene Epochs; and the Neogene as the Miocene and Pliocene Epochs.[13] In 1989, Tertiary and Quaternary were removed from the time scale due to the arbitrary nature of their boundary, but Quaternary was reinstated in 2009.[14]

The term "Paleocene" from Ancient Greek παλαιός (palaiós), meaning "old", and καινός (kainós), meaning "new", specifically from "Eocene", and so means "the old part of the Eocene". The Eocene, in turn, is derived from Ancient Greek Ἠώς (Ēṓs), meaning "dawn", and καινός (kainós), meaning "new", as the epoch saw the dawn of recent, or modern, life. Paleocene did not come into broad usage until around 1920. In North America and mainland Europe, the standard spelling is "Paleocene", whereas it is "Palaeocene" in the UK. Geologist T. C. R. Pulvertaft has argued that the latter spelling is incorrect because this would imply either a translation of "old recent" or a derivation from "pala" and "Eocene", which would be incorrect because the prefix palæo- uses the ligature æ instead of "a" and "e" individually, so only both characters or neither should be dropped, not just one.[7]

Geology

[edit]

Boundaries

[edit]
A dark brown slab of rock with a whitish stripe across the middle
K–Pg boundary recorded in a Wyoming rock (the white stripe in the middle)

The Paleocene Epoch is the 10 million year time interval directly after the K–Pg extinction event, which ended the Cretaceous Period and the Mesozoic Era, and initiated the Cenozoic Era and the Paleogene Period. It is divided into three ages: the Danian spanning 66 to 61.6 Ma, the Selandian spanning 61.6 to 59.2 Ma, and the Thanetian spanning 59.2 to 56 Ma. It is succeeded by the Eocene.[15]

The K–Pg boundary is clearly defined in the fossil record in numerous places around the world by a high-iridium band, as well as discontinuities with fossil flora and fauna. It is generally thought that a 10 to 15 km (6 to 9 mi) wide asteroid impact, forming the Chicxulub Crater in the Yucatán Peninsula in the Gulf of Mexico, and Deccan Trap volcanism caused a cataclysmic event at the boundary resulting in the extinction of 75% of all species.[16][17][18][19]

The Paleocene ended with the Paleocene–Eocene thermal maximum, a short period of intense warming and ocean acidification brought about by the release of carbon en masse into the atmosphere and ocean systems,[20] which led to a mass extinction of 30–50% of benthic foraminifera–planktonic species which are used as bioindicators of the health of a marine ecosystem—one of the largest in the Cenozoic.[21][22] This event happened around 55.8 Ma, and was one of the most significant periods of global change during the Cenozoic.[20][23][24]

Stratigraphy

[edit]

Geologists divide the rocks of the Paleocene into a stratigraphic set of smaller rock units called stages, each formed during corresponding time intervals called ages. Stages can be defined globally or regionally. For global stratigraphic correlation, the ICS ratify global stages based on a Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) from a single formation (a stratotype) identifying the lower boundary of the stage. In 1989, the ICS decided to split the Paleocene into three stages: the Danian, Selandian, and Thanetian.[25]

The Danian was first defined in 1847 by German-Swiss geologist Pierre Jean Édouard Desor based on the Danish chalks at Stevns Klint and Faxse, and was part of the Cretaceous, succeeded by the Tertiary Montian Stage.[26][27] In 1982, after it was shown that the Danian and the Montian are the same, the ICS decided to define the Danian as starting with the K–Pg boundary, thus ending the practice of including the Danian in the Cretaceous. In 1991, the GSSP was defined as a well-preserved section in the El Haria Formation near El Kef, Tunisia, 36°09′13″N 8°38′55″E / 36.1537°N 8.6486°E / 36.1537; 8.6486, and the proposal was officially published in 2006.[28]

The ocean to the left, gentle tides coming in, a small piece of sandy beach before the white cliffs rise with grass on the top
The sea cliffs of Itzurun beach near the town of Zumaia, Spain, the GSSP for the Selandian and Thanetian

The Selandian and Thanetian are both defined in Itzurun beach by the Basque town of Zumaia, 43°18′02″N 2°15′34″W / 43.3006°N 2.2594°W / 43.3006; -2.2594, as the area is a continuous early Santonian to early Eocene sea cliff outcrop. The Paleocene section is an essentially complete, exposed record 165 m (541 ft) thick, mainly composed of alternating hemipelagic sediments deposited at a depth of about 1,000 m (3,300 ft). The Danian deposits are sequestered into the Aitzgorri Limestone Formation, and the Selandian and early Thanetian into the Itzurun Formation. The Itzurun Formation is divided into groups A and B corresponding to the two stages respectively. The two stages were ratified in 2008, and this area was chosen because of its completion, low risk of erosion, proximity to the original areas the stages were defined, accessibility, and the protected status of the area due to its geological significance.[25]

The Selandian was first proposed by Danish geologist Alfred Rosenkrantz in 1924 based on a section of fossil-rich glauconitic marls overlain by gray clay which unconformably overlies Danian chalk and limestone. The area is now subdivided into the Æbelø Formation, Holmehus Formation, and the Østerrende Clay. The beginning of this stage was defined by the end of carbonate rock deposition from an open ocean environment in the North Sea region (which had been going on for the previous 40 million years). The Selandian deposits in this area are directly overlain by the Eocene Fur Formation—the Thanetian was not represented here—and this discontinuity in the deposition record is why the GSSP was moved to Zumaia. Today, the beginning of the Selandian is marked by the appearances of the nannofossils Fasciculithus tympaniformis, Neochiastozygus perfectus, and Chiasmolithus edentulus, though some foraminifera are used by various authors.[25]

The Thanetian was first proposed by Swiss geologist Eugène Renevier, in 1873; he included the south England Thanet, Woolwich, and Reading formations. In 1880, French geologist Gustave Frédéric Dollfus narrowed the definition to just the Thanet Formation. The Thanetian begins a little after the mid-Paleocene biotic event[25]—a short-lived climatic event caused by an increase in methane[29]—recorded at Itzurun as a dark 1 m (3.3 ft) interval from a reduction of calcium carbonate. At Itzurun, it begins about 29 m (95 ft) above the base of the Selandian, and is marked by the first appearance of the algae Discoaster and a diversification of Heliolithus, though the best correlation is in terms of paleomagnetism. A chron is the occurrence of a geomagnetic reversal—when the North and South poles switch polarities. Chron 1 (C1n) is defined as modern day to about 780,000 years ago, and the n denotes "normal" as in the polarity of today, and an r "reverse" for the opposite polarity.[30] The beginning of the Thanetian is best correlated with the C26r/C26n reversal.[25]

Mineral and hydrocarbon deposits

[edit]
Paleocene coal is extracted at the Cerrejón mine, Colombia's largest open-pit mine

Several economically important coal deposits formed during the Paleocene, such as the sub-bituminous Fort Union Formation in the Powder River Basin of Wyoming and Montana,[31] which produces 43% of American coal;[32] the Wilcox Group in Texas, the richest deposits of the Gulf Coastal Plain;[33] and the Cerrejón mine in Colombia, the largest open-pit mine in the country.[34] Paleocene coal has been mined extensively in Svalbard, Norway, since near the beginning of the 20th century,[35] and late Paleocene and early Eocene coal is widely distributed across the Canadian Arctic Archipelago[36] and northern Siberia.[37] In the North Sea, Paleocene-derived natural gas reserves, when they were discovered, totaled approximately 2.23 trillion m3 (7.89 trillion ft3), and oil in place 13.54 billion barrels.[38] Important phosphate deposits—predominantly of francolite—near Métlaoui, Tunisia were formed from the late Paleocene to the early Eocene.[39]

Impact craters

[edit]
The crater underneath the Greenlandic Hiawatha Glacier dates to the Paleocene, 58 mya.[40]

Impact craters formed in the Paleocene include: the Connolly Basin crater in Western Australia less than 60 Ma,[41] the Texan Marquez crater 58 Ma,[42] the Greenlandic Hiawatha Glacier crater 58 Ma,[40] and possibly the Jordan Jabel Waqf as Suwwan crater which dates to between 56 and 37 Ma.[43] Vanadium-rich osbornite from the Isle of Skye, Scotland, dating to 60 mya may be impact ejecta.[44] Craters were also formed near the K–Pg boundary, the largest the Mexican Chicxulub crater whose impact was a major precipitator of the K–Pg extinction,[45] and also the Ukrainian Boltysh crater, dated to 65.4 Ma[46] the Canadian Eagle Butte crater (though it may be younger),[47] the Vista Alegre crater[48] (though this may date to about 115 Ma[49]). Silicate glass spherules along the Atlantic coast of the U.S. indicate a meteor impact in the region at the PETM.[50]

Paleogeography

[edit]

Paleotectonics

[edit]
A diagram of the Pacific Plate being subducted under the North American Plate
The Laramide orogeny was caused by the subduction of oceanic crust under the North American Plate

During the Paleocene, the continents continued to drift toward their present positions.[51] In the Northern Hemisphere, the former components of Laurasia (North America and Eurasia) were, at times, connected via land bridges: Beringia (at 65.5 and 58 Ma) between North America and East Asia, the De Geer route (from 71 to 63 Ma) between Greenland and Scandinavia, the Thulean route (at 57 and 55.8 Ma) between North America and Western Europe via Greenland, and the Turgai route connecting Europe with Asia (which were otherwise separated by the Turgai Strait at this time).[52][53]

The Laramide orogeny, which began in the Late Cretaceous, continued to uplift the Rocky Mountains; it ended at the end of the Paleocene.[54] Because of this and a drop in sea levels resulting from tectonic activity, the Western Interior Seaway, which had divided the continent of North America for much of the Cretaceous, had receded.[55]

Between about 60.5 and 54.5 Ma, there was heightened volcanic activity in the North Atlantic region—the third largest magmatic event in the last 150 million years—creating the North Atlantic Igneous Province.[56][57] The proto-Iceland hotspot is sometimes cited as being responsible for the initial volcanism, though rifting and resulting volcanism have also contributed.[57][58][59] This volcanism may have contributed to the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean and seafloor spreading, the divergence of the Greenland Plate from the North American Plate,[60] and, climatically, the PETM by dissociating methane clathrate crystals on the seafloor resulting in the mass release of carbon.[56][61]

North and South America remained separated by the Central American Seaway, though an island arc (the South Central American Arc) had already formed about 73 Ma. The Caribbean Large Igneous Province (now the Caribbean Plate), which had formed from the Galápagos hotspot in the Pacific in the latest Cretaceous, was moving eastward as the North American and South American plates were getting pushed in the opposite direction due to the opening of the Atlantic (strike-slip tectonics).[62][63] This motion would eventually uplift the Isthmus of Panama by 2.6 Ma. The Caribbean Plate continued moving until about 50 Ma when it reached its current position.[64]

Four maps depicting the separation of Madagascar from India
The breakup of Gondwana:
A) Early Cretaceous
B) Late Cretaceous
C) Paleocene
D) Present

The components of the former southern supercontinent Gondwanaland in the Southern Hemisphere continued to drift apart, but Antarctica was still connected to South America and Australia. Africa was heading north towards Europe, and the Indian subcontinent towards Asia, which would eventually close the Tethys Ocean.[51] The Indian and Eurasian Plates began colliding in the Paleocene,[65] with uplift (and a land connection) beginning in the Miocene about 24–17 Ma. There is evidence that some plants and animals could migrate between India and Asia during the Paleocene, possibly via intermediary island arcs.[66]

Paleoceanography

[edit]

In the modern thermohaline circulation, warm tropical water becomes colder and saltier at the poles and sinks (downwelling or deep water formation) that occurs at the North Atlantic near the North Pole and the Southern Ocean near the Antarctic Peninsula. In the Paleocene, the waterways between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic were somewhat restricted, so North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) and the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)—which circulates cold water from the Arctic towards the equator—had not yet formed, and so deep water formation probably did not occur in the North Atlantic. The Arctic and Atlantic would not be connected by sufficiently deep waters until the early to middle Eocene.[67]

There is evidence of deep water formation in the North Pacific to at least a depth of about 2,900 m (9,500 ft). The elevated global deep water temperatures in the Paleocene may have been too warm for thermohaline circulation to be predominately heat driven.[68][69] It is possible that the greenhouse climate shifted precipitation patterns, such that the Southern Hemisphere was wetter than the Northern, or the Southern experienced less evaporation than the Northern. In either case, this would have made the Northern more saline than the Southern, creating a density difference and a downwelling in the North Pacific traveling southward.[68] Deep water formation may have also occurred in the South Atlantic.[70]

It is largely unknown how global currents could have affected global temperature. The formation of the Northern Component Waters by Greenland in the Eocene—the predecessor of the AMOC—may have caused an intense warming in the North Hemisphere and cooling in the Southern, as well as an increase in deep water temperatures.[67] In the PETM, it is possible deep water formation occurred in saltier tropical waters and moved polewards, which would increase global surface temperatures by warming the poles.[22][69] Also, Antarctica was still connected to South America and Australia, and, because of this, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current—which traps cold water around the continent and prevents warm equatorial water from entering—had not yet formed. Its formation may have been related in the freezing of the continent.[71] Warm coastal upwellings at the poles would have inhibited permanent ice cover.[69] Conversely, it is possible deep water circulation was not a major contributor to the greenhouse climate, and deep water temperatures more likely change as a response to global temperature change rather than affecting it.[68][69]

In the Arctic, coastal upwelling may have been largely temperature and wind-driven. In summer, the land surface temperature was probably higher than oceanic temperature, and the opposite was true in the winter, which is consistent with monsoon seasons in Asia. Open-ocean upwelling may have also been possible.[69]

Climate

[edit]

Average climate

[edit]
Global average land (above) and deep sea (below) temperatures throughout the Cenozoic

The Paleocene climate was, much like in the Cretaceous, tropical or subtropical,[72][73][74] and the poles were temperate,[75] with an average global temperature of roughly 24–25 °C (75–77 °F).[76] For comparison, the average global temperature for the period between 1951 and 1980 was 14 °C (57 °F).[77] The latitudinal temperature gradient was approximately 0.24 °C per degree of latitude.[78] The poles also lacked ice caps,[79] though some alpine glaciation did occur in the Transantarctic Mountains.[80]

The poles probably had a cool temperate climate; northern Antarctica, Australia, the southern tip of South America, what is now the US and Canada, eastern Siberia, and Europe warm temperate; middle South America, southern and northern Africa, South India, Middle America, and China arid; and northern South America, central Africa, North India, middle Siberia, and what is now the Mediterranean Sea tropical.[81] South-central North America had a humid, monsoonal climate along its coastal plain, but conditions were drier to the west and at higher altitudes.[82] Svalbard was temperate, having a mean temperature of 19.2 ± 2.49 °C during its warmest month and 1.7 ± 3.24 °С during its coldest.[83]

Global deep water temperatures in the Paleocene likely ranged from 8–12 °C (46–54 °F),[68][69] compared to 0–3 °C (32–37 °F) in modern day.[84] Based on the upper limit, average sea surface temperatures (SSTs) at 60°N and S would have been the same as deep sea temperatures, at 30°N and S about 23 °C (73 °F), and at the equator about 28 °C (82 °F).[69] In the Danish Palaeocene sea, SSTs were cooler than those of the preceding Late Cretaceous and the succeeding Eocene.[85] The Paleocene foraminifera assemblage globally indicates a defined deep-water thermocline (a warmer mass of water closer to the surface sitting on top of a colder mass nearer the bottom) persisting throughout the epoch.[86] The Atlantic foraminifera indicate a general warming of sea surface temperature–with tropical taxa present in higher latitude areas–until the Late Paleocene when the thermocline became steeper and tropical foraminifera retreated back to lower latitudes.[87]

Early Paleocene atmospheric CO2 levels at what is now Castle Rock, Colorado, were calculated to be between 352 and 1,110 parts per million (ppm), with a median of 616 ppm. Based on this and estimated plant-gas exchange rates and global surface temperatures, the climate sensitivity was calculated to be +3 °C when CO2 levels doubled, compared to 7 °C following the formation of ice at the poles. CO2 levels alone may have been insufficient in maintaining the greenhouse climate, and some positive feedbacks must have been active, such as some combination of cloud, aerosol, or vegetation related processes.[88] A 2019 study identified changes in orbital eccentricity as the dominant drivers of climate between the late Cretaceous and the early Eocene.[89]

Climatic events

[edit]

The effects of the meteor impact and volcanism 66 Ma and the climate across the K–Pg boundary were likely fleeting, and climate reverted to normal in a short time frame.[90] The freezing temperatures probably reversed after three years[91] and returned to normal within decades,[92] sulfuric acid aerosols causing acid rain probably dissipated after 10 years,[93] and dust from the impact blocking out sunlight and inhibiting photosynthesis would have lasted up to a year[94] though potential global wildfires raging for several years would have released more particulates into the atmosphere.[95] For the following half million years, the carbon isotope gradient—a difference in the 13C/12C ratio between surface and deep ocean water, causing carbon to cycle into the deep sea—may have shut down. This, termed a "Strangelove ocean", indicates low oceanic productivity;[96] resultant decreased phytoplankton activity may have led to a reduction in cloud seeds and, thus, marine cloud brightening, causing global temperatures to increase by 6 °C (CLAW hypothesis).[97] Following the extreme disruptions in the aftermath of the K-Pg extinction event, the relatively cool, though still greenhouse, conditions of the Late Cretaceous–Early Palaeogene Cool Interval (LKEPCI) that began in the Late Cretaceous continued.[98]

The Dan–C2 Event 65.2 Ma in the early Danian spanned about 100,000 years, and was characterized by an increase in carbon, particularly in the deep sea. Since the mid-Maastrichtian, more and more carbon had been sequestered in the deep sea possibly due to a global cooling trend and increased circulation into the deep sea. The Dan–C2 event may represent a release of this carbon after deep sea temperatures rose to a certain threshold, as warmer water can dissolve less carbon.[99] Alternatively, the cause of the Dan-C2 event may have been a pulse of Deccan Traps volcanism.[100] Savanna may have temporarily displaced forestland in this interval.[101]

Around 62.2 Ma in the late Danian, there was a warming event and evidence of ocean acidification associated with an increase in carbon;[102] at this time, there was major seafloor spreading in the Atlantic and volcanic activity along the southeast margin of Greenland. The Latest Danian Event, also known as the Top Chron C27n Event, lasted about 200,000 years and resulted in a 1.6–2.8 °C increase in temperatures throughout the water column. Though the temperature in the latest Danian varied at about the same magnitude, this event coincides with an increase of carbon.[103]

About 60.5 Ma at the Danian/Selandian boundary, there is evidence of anoxia spreading out into coastal waters, and a drop in sea levels which is most likely explained as an increase in temperature and evaporation, as there was no ice at the poles to lock up water.[104]

During the mid-Palaeocene biotic event (MPBE), also known as the Early Late Palaeocene Event (ELPE),[105][106] around 59 Ma (roughly 50,000 years before the Selandian/Thanetian boundary), the temperature spiked probably due to a mass release of the deep sea methane hydrate into the atmosphere and ocean systems. Carbon was probably output for 10–11,000 years, and the aftereffects likely subsided around 52–53,000 years later.[107] There is also evidence this occurred again 300,000 years later in the early Thanetian dubbed MPBE-2. Respectively, about 83 and 132 gigatons of methane-derived carbon were ejected into the atmosphere, which suggests a 2–3 °C (3.6–5.4 °F) rise in temperature, and likely caused heightened seasonality and less stable environmental conditions. It may have also caused an increase of grass in some areas.[29]

From 59.7 to 58.1 Ma, during the late Selandian and early Thanetian, organic carbon burial resulted in a period of climatic cooling, sea level fall and transient ice growth. This interval saw the highest δ18O values of the epoch.[108]

Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum

[edit]

The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum was an approximately 200,000-year-long event where the global average temperature rose by some 5 to 8 °C (9 to 14 °F),[56] and mid-latitude and polar areas may have exceeded modern tropical temperatures of 24–29 °C (75–84 °F).[109] This was due to an ejection of 2,500–4,500 gigatons of carbon into the atmosphere, most commonly explained as the perturbation and release of methane clathrate deposits in the North Atlantic from tectonic activity and resultant increase in bottom water temperatures.[56] Other proposed hypotheses include methane release from the heating of organic matter at the seafloor rather than methane clathrates,[110][111] or melting permafrost.[112]

The duration of carbon output is controversial, but most likely about 2,500 years.[113] This carbon also interfered with the carbon cycle and caused ocean acidification,[114][115] and potentially altered[70] and slowed down ocean currents, the latter leading to the expansion of oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) in the deep sea.[116] In surface water, OMZs could have also been caused from the formation of strong thermoclines preventing oxygen inflow, and higher temperatures equated to higher productivity leading to higher oxygen usurpation.[117] Further, expanding OMZs could have caused the proliferation of sulfate-reducing microorganisms which create highly toxic hydrogen sulfide H2S as a waste product. During the event, the volume of sulfidic water may have been 10–20% of total ocean volume, in comparison to today's 1%. This may have also caused chemocline upwellings along continents and the dispersal of H2S into the atmosphere.[118] During the PETM there was a temporary dwarfing of mammals apparently caused by the upward excursion in temperature.[119]

Flora

[edit]
A tropical environment with a lake, palm trees and conifers, and in the background a tall mountain
Restoration of a Patagonian landscape during the Danian

The warm, wet climate supported tropical and subtropical forests worldwide, mainly populated by conifers and broad-leafed trees.[120][79] In Patagonia, the landscape supported tropical rainforests, cloud rainforests, mangrove forests, swamp forests, savannas, and sclerophyllous forests.[79] In the Colombian Cerrejón Formation, fossil flora belong to the same families as modern day flora—such as palm trees, legumes, aroids, and malvales[121]—and the same is true in the North Dakotan Almont/Beicegel Creek—such as Ochnaceae, Cyclocarya, and Ginkgo cranei[122]—indicating the same floral families have characterized South American rainforests and the American Western Interior since the Paleocene.[121][122]

Reconstruction of the late Paleocene Ginkgo cranei

The extinction of large herbivorous dinosaurs may have allowed the forests to grow quite dense,[75] and there is little evidence of wide open plains.[120] Plants evolved several techniques to cope with high plant density, such as buttressing to better absorb nutrients and compete with other plants, increased height to reach sunlight, larger diaspore in seeds to provide added nutrition on the dark forest floor, and epiphytism where a plant grows on another plant in response to less space on the forest floor.[120] Despite increasing density—which could act as fuel—wildfires decreased in frequency from the Cretaceous to the early Eocene as the atmospheric oxygen levels decreased to modern day levels, though they may have been more intense.[123]

Recovery

[edit]

There was a major die-off of plant species over the boundary; for example, in the Williston Basin of North Dakota, an estimated 1/3 to 3/5 of plant species went extinct.[124] The K–Pg extinction event ushered in a floral turnover; for example, the once commonplace Araucariaceae conifers were almost fully replaced by Podocarpaceae conifers, and the Cheirolepidiaceae, a group of conifers that had dominated during most of the Mesozoic but had become rare during the Late Cretaceous became dominant trees in Patagonia, before going extinct.[125][120][126] Some plant communities, such as those in eastern North America, were already experiencing an extinction event in the late Maastrichtian, particularly in the 1 million years before the K–Pg extinction event.[127] The "disaster plants" that refilled the emptied landscape crowded out many Cretaceous plants, and resultantly, many went extinct by the middle Paleocene.[72]

A slab of gray rock featuring several thin branches with thistle-like leaves
The conifer Glyptostrobus europaeus from the Canadian Paskapoo Formation

The strata immediately overlaying the K–Pg extinction event are especially rich in fern fossils. Ferns are often the first species to colonize areas damaged by forest fires, so this "fern spike" may mark the recovery of the biosphere following the impact (which caused blazing fires worldwide).[128][129] The diversifying herb flora of the early Paleocene either represent pioneer species which re-colonized the recently emptied landscape, or a response to the increased amount of shade provided in a forested landscape.[127] Lycopods, ferns, and angiosperm shrubs may have been important components of the Paleocene understory.[120]

In general, the forests of the Paleocene were species-poor, and diversity did not fully recover until the end of the Paleocene.[72][130] For example, the floral diversity of what is now the Holarctic region (comprising most of the Northern Hemisphere) was mainly early members of Ginkgo, Metasequoia, Glyptostrobus, Macginitiea, Platanus, Carya, Ampelopsis, and Cercidiphyllum.[120] Patterns in plant recovery varied significantly with latitude, climate, and altitude. For example, what is now Castle Rock, Colorado featured a rich rainforest only 1.4 million years after the event, probably due to a rain shadow effect causing regular monsoon seasons.[130] Conversely, low plant diversity and a lack of specialization in insects in the Colombian Cerrejón Formation, dated to 58 mya, indicates the ecosystem was still recovering from the K–Pg extinction event 7 million years later.[121]

Angiosperms

[edit]
A slab of gray rock with a dark-reddish brown fruit imprint featuring fronds around its circumference
Fossil Platanus fruit from the Canadian Paskapoo Formation

Flowering plants (angiosperms), which had become dominant among forest taxa by the middle Cretaceous 110–90 Ma,[131] continued to develop and proliferate, more so to take advantage of the recently emptied niches and an increase in rainfall.[127] Along with them coevolved the insects that fed on these plants and pollinated them. Predation by insects was especially high during the PETM.[132] Many fruit-bearing plants appeared in the Paleocene in particular, probably to take advantage of the newly evolving birds and mammals for seed dispersal.[133]

In what is now the Gulf Coast, angiosperm diversity increased slowly in the early Paleocene, and more rapidly in the middle and late Paleocene. This may have been because the effects of the K–Pg extinction event were still to some extent felt in the early Paleocene, the early Paleocene may not have had as many open niches, early angiosperms may not have been able to evolve at such an accelerated rate as later angiosperms, low diversity equates to lower evolution rates, or there was not much angiosperm migration into the region in the early Paleocene.[127] Over the K–Pg extinction event, angiosperms had a higher extinction rate than gymnosperms (which include conifers, cycads, and relatives) and pteridophytes (ferns, horsetails, and relatives); zoophilous angiosperms (those that relied on animals for pollination) had a higher rate than anemophilous angiosperms; and evergreen angiosperms had a higher rate than deciduous angiosperms as deciduous plants can become dormant in harsh conditions.[127]

In the Gulf Coast, angiosperms experienced another extinction event during the PETM, which they recovered quickly from in the Eocene through immigration from the Caribbean and Europe. During this time, the climate became warmer and wetter, and it is possible that angiosperms evolved to become stenotopic by this time, able to inhabit a narrow range of temperature and moisture; or, since the dominant floral ecosystem was a highly integrated and complex closed-canopy rainforest by the middle Paleocene, the plant ecosystems were more vulnerable to climate change.[127] There is some evidence that, in the Gulf Coast, there was an extinction event in the late Paleocene preceding the PETM, which may have been due to the aforementioned vulnerability of complex rainforests, and the ecosystem may have been disrupted by only a small change in climate.[134]

Polar forests

[edit]
A slab of gray rock with a darker gray evergreen branch fossil
Metasequoia occidentalis from the Canadian Scollard Formation

The warm Paleocene climate, much like that of the Cretaceous, allowed for diverse polar forests. Whereas precipitation is a major factor in plant diversity nearer the equator, polar plants had to adapt to varying light availability (polar nights and midnight suns) and temperatures. Because of this, plants from both poles independently evolved some similar characteristics, such as broad leaves. Plant diversity at both poles increased throughout the Paleocene, especially at the end, in tandem with the increasing global temperature.[135]

At the North Pole, woody angiosperms had become the dominant plants, a reversal from the Cretaceous where herbs proliferated. The Iceberg Bay Formation on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut (latitude 7580° N) shows remains of a late Paleocene dawn redwood forest, the canopy reaching around 32 m (105 ft), and a climate similar to the Pacific Northwest.[75] On the Alaska North Slope, Metasequoia was the dominant conifer. Much of the diversity represented migrants from nearer the equator. Deciduousness was dominant, probably to conserve energy by retroactively shedding leaves and retaining some energy rather than having them die from frostbite.[135] In south-central Alaska, the Chickaloon Formation preserves peat-forming swamps dominated by taxodiaceous conifers and clastic floodplains occupied by angiosperm–conifer forests.[136]

At the South Pole, due to the increasing isolation of Antarctica, many plant taxa were endemic to the continent instead of migrating down. Patagonian flora may have originated in Antarctica.[135][137] The climate was much cooler than in the Late Cretaceous, though frost probably was not common in at least coastal areas. East Antarctica was likely warm and humid. Because of this, evergreen forests could proliferate as, in the absence of frost and a low probability of leaves dying, it was more energy efficient to retain leaves than to regrow them every year. One possibility is that the interior of the continent favored deciduous trees, though prevailing continental climates may have produced winters warm enough to support evergreen forests. As in the Cretaceous, podocarpaceous conifers, Nothofagus, and Proteaceae angiosperms were common.[135]

Fauna

[edit]

In the K–Pg extinction event, every land animal over 25 kg (55 lb) was wiped out, leaving open several niches at the beginning of the epoch.[138]

Mammals

[edit]
Portrait view of a heavily built 4-legged animal with a strong tail
Restoration of the herbivorous late Paleocene pantodont Barylambda, which could have weighed up to 650 kg (1,430 lb)[139]

Mammals had first appeared in the Late Triassic, and remained small and nocturnal throughout the Mesozoic to avoid competition with dinosaurs (nocturnal bottleneck),[140] though, by the Middle Jurassic, they had branched out into several habitats—such as subterranean, arboreal, and aquatic—[141] and the largest known Mesozoic mammal, Repenomamus robustus reached about 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in length and 12–14 kg (26–31 lb) in weight–comparable to the modern day Virginia opossum.[142] Though some mammals could sporadically venture out in daytime (cathemerality) by roughly 10 million years before the K–Pg extinction event, they only became strictly diurnal (active in the daytime) sometime after.[140]

In general, Paleocene mammals retained this small size until near the end of the epoch, and, consequently, early mammal bones are not well preserved in the fossil record, and most of what is known comes from fossil teeth.[51] Multituberculates, a now-extinct rodent-like group not closely related to any modern mammal, were the most successful group of mammals in the Mesozoic, and they reached peak diversity in the early Paleocene. During this time, multituberculate taxa had a wide range of dental complexity, which correlates to a broader range in diet for the group as a whole. Multituberculates declined in the late Paleocene and went extinct at the end of the Eocene, possibly due to competition from newly evolving rodents.[143]

Portrait view of a wolf-like skeleton with large teeth
The mesonychid Sinonyx at the Museo delle Scienze

Nonetheless, following the K–Pg extinction event, mammals very quickly diversified and filled the empty niches.[144][145] Mammal richness during this epoch, in contrast to the present day, varied insignificantly with latitude.[146] Modern mammals are subdivided into therians (modern members are placentals and marsupials) and monotremes. These three groups all originated in the Cretaceous.[147] Paleocene marsupials include Peradectes,[148] and monotremes Monotrematum.[149][150] The epoch featured the rise of many crown placental groups—groups that have living members in modern day—such as the earliest afrotherian Ocepeia, xenarthran Utaetus, rodent Tribosphenomys and Paramys, the forerunners of primates the Plesiadapiformes, earliest carnivorans Ravenictis and Pristinictis, possible pangolins Palaeanodonta, possible forerunners of odd-toed ungulates Phenacodontidae, and eulipotyphlans Nyctitheriidae.[151] Though therian mammals had probably already begun to diversify around 10 to 20 million years before the K–Pg extinction event, average mammal size increased greatly after the boundary, and a radiation into frugivory (fruit-eating) and omnivory began, namely with the newly evolving large herbivores such as the Taeniodonta, Tillodonta, Pantodonta, Polydolopimorphia, and the Dinocerata.[152][153] Large carnivores include the wolf-like Mesonychia, such as Ankalagon[154] and Sinonyx.[155]

Though there was an explosive diversification, the affinities of most Paleocene mammals are unknown, and only primates, carnivorans, and rodents have unambiguous Paleocene origins, resulting in a 10 million year gap in the fossil record of other mammalian crown orders. The most species-rich order of Paleocene mammals is Condylarthra, which is a wastebasket taxon for miscellaneous bunodont hoofed mammals. Other ambiguous orders include the Leptictida, Cimolesta, and Creodonta. This uncertainty blurs the early evolution of placentals.[151]

Birds

[edit]
A big bird with blue-gray feathers, a white underbelly, and a large, parrot-like, red beak
Gastornis restoration

According to DNA studies, modern birds (Neornithes) rapidly diversified following the extinction of the other dinosaurs in the Paleocene, and nearly all modern bird lineages can trace their origins to this epoch with the exception of fowl and palaeognaths. This was one of the fastest diversifications of any group,[156] probably fueled by the diversification of fruit-bearing trees and associated insects, and the modern bird groups had likely already diverged within four million years of the K–Pg extinction event. However, the fossil record of birds in the Paleocene is rather poor compared to other groups, limited globally to mainly waterbirds such as the early penguin Waimanu. The earliest arboreal crown group bird known is Tsidiiyazhi, a mousebird dating to around 62 Ma.[157] The fossil record also includes early owls such as the large Berruornis from France,[158] and the smaller Ogygoptynx from the United States.[159]

Almost all archaic birds (any bird outside Neornithes) went extinct during the K–Pg extinction event, although the archaic Qinornis is recorded in the Paleocene.[157] Their extinction may have led to the proliferation of neornithine birds in the Paleocene, and the only known Cretaceous neornithine bird is the waterbird Vegavis, and possibly also the waterbird Teviornis.[160]

In the Mesozoic, birds and pterosaurs exhibited size-related niche partitioning—no known Late Cretaceous flying bird had a wingspan greater than 2 m (6 ft 7 in) nor exceeded a weight of 5 kg (11 lb), whereas contemporary pterosaurs ranged from 2–10 m (6 ft 7 in – 32 ft 10 in), probably to avoid competition. Their extinction allowed flying birds to attain greater size, such as pelagornithids and pelecaniformes.[161] The Paleocene pelagornithid Protodontopteryx was quite small compared to later members, with a wingspan of about 1 m (3.3 ft), comparable to a gull.[162] On the archipelago-continent of Europe, the flightless bird Gastornis was the largest herbivore at 2 m (6 ft 7 in) tall for the largest species, possibly due to lack of competition from newly emerging large mammalian herbivores which were prevalent on the other continents.[138][163] The carnivorous terror birds in South America have a contentious appearance in the Paleocene with Paleopsilopterus, though the first definitive appearance is in the Eocene.[164]

Reptiles

[edit]
Topside view of a crocodile skeleton
Borealosuchus at the Field Museum of Natural History

It is generally believed all non-avian dinosaurs went extinct at the K–Pg extinction event 66 Ma, though there are a couple of controversial claims of Paleocene dinosaurs which would indicate a gradual decline of dinosaurs. Contentious dates include remains from the Hell Creek Formation dated 40,000 years after the boundary,[165] and a hadrosaur femur from the San Juan Basin dated to 64.5 Ma,[166] but such stray late forms may be zombie taxa that were washed out and moved to younger sediments.[167]

In the wake of the K–Pg extinction event, 83% of lizard and snake (squamate) species went extinct, and the diversity did not fully recover until the end of the Paleocene. However, since the only major squamate lineages to disappear in the event were the mosasaurs and polyglyphanodontians (the latter making up 40% of Maastrichtian lizard diversity), and most major squamate groups had evolved by the Cretaceous, the event probably did not greatly affect squamate evolution, and newly evolving squamates did not seemingly branch out into new niches as mammals. That is, Cretaceous and Paleogene squamates filled the same niches. Nonetheless, there was a faunal turnover of squamates, and groups that were dominant by the Eocene were not as abundant in the Cretaceous, namely the anguids, iguanas, night lizards, pythons, colubrids, boas, and worm lizards. Only small squamates are known from the early Paleocene—the largest snake Helagras was 950 mm (37 in) in length[168]—but the late Paleocene snake Titanoboa grew to over 13 m (43 ft) long, the longest snake ever recorded.[169] Kawasphenodon peligrensis from the early Paleocene of South America represents the youngest record of Rhynchocephalia outside of New Zealand, where the only extant representative of the order, the tuatara, resides.[170]

Freshwater crocodilians and choristoderans were among the aquatic reptiles to have survived the K–Pg extinction event, probably because freshwater environments were not as impacted as marine ones.[171] One example of a Paleocene crocodile is Borealosuchus, which averaged 3.7 m (12 ft) in length at the Wannagan Creek site.[172] Among crocodyliformes, the aquatic and terrestrial dyrosaurs and the fully terrestrial sebecids would also survive the K-Pg extinction event, and a late surviving member of Pholidosauridae is also known from the Danian of Morocco.[173] Three choristoderans are known from the Paleocene: The gharial-like neochoristoderans Champsosaurus—the largest is the Paleocene C. gigas at 3 m (9.8 ft), Simoedosaurus—the largest specimen measuring 5 m (16 ft), and an indeterminate species of the lizard like non-neochoristoderan Lazarussuchus around 44 centimetres in length.[174] The last known choristoderes, belonging to the genus Lazarussuchus, are known from the Miocene.[175]

Turtles experienced a decline in the Campanian (Late Cretaceous) during a cooling event, and recovered during the PETM at the end of the Paleocene.[176] Turtles were not greatly affected by the K–Pg extinction event, and around 80% of species survived.[177] In Colombia, a 60 million year old turtle with a 1.7 m (5 ft 7 in) carapace, Carbonemys, was discovered.[178]

Amphibians

[edit]

There is little evidence amphibians were affected very much by the K–Pg extinction event, probably because the freshwater habitats they inhabited were not as greatly impacted as marine environments.[179] In the Hell Creek Formation of eastern Montana, a 1990 study found no extinction in amphibian species across the boundary.[180] The true toads evolved during the Paleocene.[181] The final record of albanerpetontids from North America and outside of Europe and Anatolia, an unnamed species of Albanerpeton, is known from the Paleocene aged Paskapoo Formation in Canada.[182]

Fish

[edit]
The top half is a rock slab featuring an oblong, orange-brown fish impression, and the bottom half is an illustration highlighting the armored scutes on its body
The early Paleocene trumpetfish Eekaulostomus from Palenque, Mexico

The small pelagic fish population recovered rather quickly, and there was a low extinction rate for sharks and rays. Overall, only 12% of fish species went extinct.[183] During the Cretaceous, fishes were not very abundant, probably due to heightened predation by or competition with ammonites and squid, although large predatory fish did exist, including ichthyodectids, pachycormids and pachyrhizodontids.[184] Almost immediately following the K–Pg extinction event, ray-finned fish — today, representing nearly half of all vertebrate taxa – became much more numerous and increased in size, and rose to dominate the open-oceans. Acanthomorphs—a group of ray-finned fish which, today, represent a third of all vertebrate life—experienced a massive diversification following the K–Pg extinction event, dominating marine ecosystems by the end of the Paleocene, refilling vacant, open-ocean predatory niches as well as spreading out into recovering reef systems. In specific, percomorphs diversified faster than any other vertebrate group at the time, with the exception of birds; Cretaceous percomorphs varied very little in body plan, whereas, by the Eocene, percomorphs evolved into vastly varying creatures[185] such as early scombrids (today, tuna, mackerels, and bonitos),[184] barracudas,[186] jacks,[185] billfish,[187] flatfishes,[188] and aulostomoid (trumpetfish and cornetfish).[189][185][190] However, the discovery of the Cretaceous cusk eel Pastorius shows that the body plans of at least some percomorphs were already highly variable, perhaps indicating an already diverse array of percomorph body plans before the Paleocene.[191]

A brown shark toothed with top part lodged in a rock
Otodus obliquus shark tooth from Oued Zem, Morocco

Conversely, sharks and rays appear to have been unable to exploit the vacant niches, and recovered the same pre-extinction abundance.[183][192] There was a faunal turnover of sharks from mackerel sharks to ground sharks, as ground sharks are more suited to hunting the rapidly diversifying ray-finned fish whereas mackerel sharks target larger prey.[193] The first megatoothed shark, Otodus obliquus—the ancestor of the giant megalodon—is recorded from the Paleocene.[194]

Several Paleocene freshwater fish are recorded from North America, including bowfins, gars, arowanas, Gonorynchidae, common catfish, smelts, and pike.[195]

Insects and arachnids

[edit]
Earwig from the late Paleocene Danish Fur Formation

Insect recovery varied from place to place. For example, it may have taken until the PETM for insect diversity to recover in the western interior of North America, whereas Patagonian insect diversity had recovered by four million years after the K–Pg extinction event. In some areas, such as the Bighorn Basin in Wyoming, there is a dramatic increase in plant predation during the PETM, although this is probably not indicative of a diversification event in insects due to rising temperatures because plant predation decreases following the PETM. More likely, insects followed their host plant or plants which were expanding into mid-latitude regions during the PETM, and then retreated afterward.[132][196]

The middle-to-late Paleocene French Menat Formation shows an abundance of beetles (making up 77.5% of the insect diversity)—especially weevils (50% of diversity), jewel beetles, leaf beetles, and reticulated beetles—as well as other true bugs—such as pond skaters—and cockroaches. To a lesser degree, there are also orthopterans, hymenopterans, butterflies, and flies, though planthoppers were more common than flies. Representing less than 1% of fossil remains dragonflies, caddisflies, mayflies, earwigs, mantises, net-winged insects, and possibly termites.[197]

The Wyoming Hanna Formation is the only known Paleocene formation to produce sizable pieces of amber, as opposed to only small droplets. The amber was formed by a single or a closely related group of either taxodiaceaen or pine tree(s) which produced cones similar to those of dammaras. Only one insect, a thrips, has been identified.[198]

A slab of rock with a faint impression of an ant
The ant Napakimyrma paskapooensis from the Canadian Paskapoo Formation

There is a gap in the ant fossil record from 78 to 55 Ma, except for the aneuretine Napakimyrma paskapooensis from the 62–56 Ma Canadian Paskapoo Formation.[199] Given high abundance in the Eocene, two of the modern dominant ant subfamilies—Ponerinae and Myrmicinae—likely originated and greatly diversified in the Paleocene, acting as major hunters of arthropods, and probably competed with each other for food and nesting grounds in the dense angiosperm leaf litter. Myrmicines expanded their diets to seeds and formed trophobiotic symbiotic relationships with aphids, mealybugs, treehoppers, and other honeydew secreting insects which were also successful in angiosperm forests, allowing them to invade other biomes, such as the canopy or temperate environments, and achieve a worldwide distribution by the middle Eocene.[200]

About 80% of the butterfly and moth (lepidopteran) fossil record occurs in the early Paleogene, specifically the late Paleocene and the middle-to-late Eocene. Most Paleocene lepidopteran compression fossils come from the Danish Fur Formation. Though there is low family-level diversity in the Paleocene compared to later epochs, this may be due to a largely incomplete fossil record.[201] The evolution of bats had a profound effect on lepidopterans, which feature several anti-predator adaptations such as echolocation jamming and the ability to detect bat signals.[202]

Bees were likely heavily impacted by the K–Pg extinction event and a die-off of flowering plants, though the bee fossil record is very limited.[203] The oldest kleptoparasitic bee, Paleoepeolus, is known from the Paleocene 60 Ma.[204]

Though the Eocene features, by far, the highest proportion of known fossil spider species, the Paleocene spider assemblage is quite low.[205] Some spider groups began to diversify around the PETM, such as jumping spiders,[206] and possibly coelotine spiders (members of the funnel weaver family).[207]

The diversification of mammals had a profound effect on parasitic insects, namely the evolution of bats, which have more ectoparasites than any other known mammal or bird. The PETM's effect on mammals greatly impacted the evolution of fleas, ticks, and oestroids.[208]

Marine invertebrates

[edit]
A rudist, the dominant reef-building organism of the Cretaceous

Among marine invertebrates, plankton and those with a planktonic stage in their development (meroplankton) were most impacted by the K–Pg extinction event, and plankton populations crashed. Nearly 90% of all calcifying plankton species perished. This reverberated up and caused a global marine food chain collapse, namely with the extinction of ammonites and large raptorial marine reptiles. Nonetheless, the rapid diversification of large fish species indicates a healthy plankton population through the Paleocene.[183]

Marine invertebrate diversity may have taken about 7 million years to recover, though this may be a preservation artifact as anything smaller than 5 mm (0.20 in) is unlikely to be fossilized, and body size may have simply decreased across the boundary.[209] A 2019 study found that in Seymour Island, Antarctica, the marine life assemblage consisted primarily of burrowing creatures—such as burrowing clams and snails—for around 320,000 years after the K–Pg extinction event, and it took around a million years for the marine diversity to return to previous levels. Areas closer to the equator may have been more affected.[90] Sand dollars first evolved in the late Paleocene.[210] The Late Cretaceous decapod crustacean assemblage of James Ross Island appears to have been mainly pioneer species and the ancestors of modern fauna, such as the first Antarctic crabs and the first appearance of the lobsters of the genera Linuparus, Metanephrops, and Munidopsis which still inhabit Antarctica today.[211]

In the Cretaceous, the main reef-building creatures were the box-like bivalve rudists instead of coral—though a diverse Cretaceous coral assemblage did exist—and rudists had collapsed by the time of the K–Pg extinction event. Some corals are known to have survived in higher latitudes in the Late Cretaceous and into the Paleogene, and hard coral-dominated reefs may have recovered by 8 million years after the K–Pg extinction event, though the coral fossil record of this time is rather sparse.[212] Though there was a lack of extensive coral reefs in the Paleocene, there were some colonies—mainly dominated by zooxanthellate corals—in shallow coastal (neritic) areas. Starting in the latest Cretaceous and continuing until the early Eocene, calcareous corals rapidly diversified. Corals probably competed mainly with red and coralline algae for space on the seafloor. Calcified dasycladalean green algae experienced the greatest diversity in their evolutionary history in the Paleocene.[213] Though coral reef ecosystems do not become particularly abundant in the fossil record until the Miocene (possibly due to preservation bias), strong Paleocene coral reefs have been identified in what are now the Pyrenees (emerging as early as 63 Ma), with some smaller Paleocene coral reefs identified across the Mediterranean region.[214]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Paleocene Epoch, the inaugural division of the Period within the Era, extended from approximately 66 to 56 million years ago and immediately followed the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) mass that eradicated non-avian dinosaurs and approximately 75% of Earth's species. This epoch marked a pivotal phase of ecological recovery and evolutionary innovation on a planet still reeling from the asteroid impact and volcanic upheavals that defined the K–Pg boundary, with global ecosystems transitioning from dominance by reptiles to the proliferation of mammals, birds, and modern plant groups. During the Paleocene, Earth's climate was notably warmer and more equable than present conditions, characterized by high global temperatures without polar ice caps and the spread of subtropical to tropical vegetation even into high-latitude regions like . Sea levels initially dropped significantly after the retreat of the vast Interior Seaway, exposing large expanses of continental interiors in , , , and , which facilitated the deposition of terrestrial sediments such as the Fort Union Formation in the . Tectonic activity persisted, including the ongoing that uplifted the , while the supercontinent of continued to fragment, with , , , , and existing as isolated landmasses. Life in the Paleocene diversified rapidly amid these changes, with forests of broad-leaved evergreens and early angiosperms dominating landscapes, alongside such as pines and early representatives of palms that foreshadowed modern floras. saw the explosive of small mammals—no larger than a modern or small —including early , primitive , ungulates, and carnivorans, as well as the persistence of reptiles like , crocodilians, snakes, and ; birds also proliferated in the absence of large predatory dinosaurs. The culminated around 56 million years ago in the (PETM), a brief but intense global warming event driven by massive carbon releases, which triggered further evolutionary shifts and deep-sea extinctions but set the stage for the Eocene's boom.

Introduction

Etymology and definition

The term "Paleocene" derives from the words palaios (παλαιός), meaning "old," and kainos (καινός), meaning "new," signifying the earliest phase of the era. It was coined in 1874 by the Alsatian paleobotanist Wilhelm Philipp Schimper in his Traité de Paléontologie Végétale. The Paleocene Epoch is formally defined by the (ICS) as the inaugural epoch of the Paleogene Period within the Era, encompassing the interval from 66.0 to 56.0 million years ago (Ma). This definition aligns with the global stratigraphic framework established through the ICS's International Chronostratigraphic Chart, which integrates , chemostratigraphy, and to delineate epoch boundaries. The Paleocene immediately succeeds the Period and precedes the Eocene Epoch, with its basal boundary defined at the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction horizon, recognized by a distinctive iridium-rich clay layer worldwide. This positioning underscores the epoch's role as a critical transitional interval in Earth's geologic history, bridging the and eras.

Geological timeframe and boundaries

The Paleocene Epoch spans from 66.0 Ma to 56.0 Ma, according to the International Chronostratigraphic Chart. This timeframe represents the earliest division of the Period, following the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction and preceding the Eocene. The absolute ages are calibrated using of volcanic ash layers, astronomical tuning of sedimentary cycles, and magnetostratigraphic correlations across global sections. The lower boundary of the Paleocene is defined by the K-Pg boundary, marked by an iridium-rich clay layer resulting from the Chicxulub asteroid impact in , which caused widespread of non-avian dinosaurs and marine fauna. The Global Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) for this boundary, and thus the base of the Paleocene and Stage, is located at , , where the clay layer overlies the uppermost sediments and is correlated globally via the , planktonic foraminiferal turnover (from Guembelitria cretacea zone to Paleocene Parvularugoglobigerina eugubina zone), and the base of magnetic polarity chron C29r. This GSSP ensures precise correlation, with the boundary dated at 66.0 ± 0.1 Ma based on argon-argon dating of impact-related tektites. The upper boundary marks the transition to the Eocene Epoch and is defined by the onset of the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), a rapid global warming event, at the base of a prominent negative carbon excursion (CIE) in marine and terrestrial records. The GSSP is situated at the Dababiya Quarry near , , specifically 1.58 m above the base of the DBH subsection, where the CIE begins in a clay layer above a minor surface, coinciding with benthic foraminiferal turnover (from Paleocene G. pseudovenezuelana zone to Eocene A. sibayaensis zone) and occurring within the lower part of magnetic polarity chron C24r. This boundary is dated at 56.0 Ma and is correlated worldwide through the CIE, calcareous nannofossil shifts (e.g., lowest occurrence of Rhomboaster spp.), and the absence of larger benthic like Discocyclina. The Paleocene is subdivided into three stages: the Danian (66.0–61.7 Ma), Selandian (61.7–59.2 Ma), and Thanetian (59.2–56.0 Ma). The Danian encompasses the immediate post-extinction recovery and is bounded above by the Danian-Selandian transition, correlated via calcareous nannofossil zones (NP4 to NP5) and magnetochrons C29r to C27n. The Selandian base, its GSSP at Zumaia, Spain, is defined by the first downhole occurrence of the calcareous nannofossil Fasciculithus billii within chron C27n, marking a shift in nannofossil assemblages (from NP5 to NP6) and associated with a minor sea-level rise. The Thanetian base is defined at the base of magnetochron C26n within the Zumaia section, approximately 78 m above the K-Pg boundary and 2.8 m above the Mid-Paleocene Biotic Event clay interval, corresponding to the base of nannofossil zone NP8. These subdivisions are reinforced by integrated magnetobiochronology, ensuring global synchrony.

Geological Setting

Stratigraphy

The Paleocene Epoch is characterized by a diverse array of sedimentary deposits worldwide, reflecting a transition from marine-dominated environments in its early stages to more terrestrial and marginal marine settings later on. These deposits include chalks, limestones, sandstones, shales, and coal-bearing sequences, which provide the primary record of post-Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary recovery and environmental stabilization. Stratigraphic frameworks rely on lithological characteristics, content, and geochemical signatures to delineate stages and correlate sections globally. Key stratigraphic units exemplify this diversity. In , the Stage is represented by chalk deposits in , such as the Formation, which consists of cool-water carbonates formed in a shallow shelf setting with bryozoan-algal buildups and minor siliciclastics. These chalks, up to 30 meters thick, overlie limestones and mark the initial following the K-Pg boundary. In , the Thanetian Stage includes within the upper Fort Union Formation in , comprising variegated mudstones, sandstones, and seams deposited in fluvial and lacustrine environments as part of a broader system. This formation, exceeding 300 meters in thickness in the , records progradational fluvial systems with red oxidization indicating periodic subaerial exposure. Globally, Tethyan carbonates of the Paleocene, particularly in the southern Tethys regions like and , form extensive platform sequences of shallow-water limestones and dolomites, often exceeding 200 meters, dominated by nummulitid and in tropical carbonate factories. These units, such as the Tarawan Formation, reflect warm, oligotrophic conditions with cyclic platform aggradation. Correlation of Paleocene strata employs biostratigraphic and chemostratigraphic tools for global synchronization. Planktonic foraminiferal biozonation divides the epoch into zones P0 through P5, starting with the Guembelitria cretacea Partial Range Zone (P0) in the lowermost , defined by the survival of this disaster taxon post-K-Pg , and extending to the Globanomalina pseudomenardii Zone (P5) in the late Thanetian, marked by the evolution of triserial forms. These zones, calibrated via , enable precise stage boundaries with resolutions of 0.5-1 million years. nannofossil events provide complementary datums, including the lowest occurrence of Fasciculithus ulii in NP4 (mid-) and the highest occurrence of Coccolithus pelagicus in NP5 (early Thanetian), which help correlate pelagic sections and detect hiatuses. Carbon isotope , such as the negative shift at the Paleocene-Eocene boundary (PETM CIE, ~ -4‰ in δ¹³C), serve as chemostratigraphic markers for the uppermost Thanetian, while a mid-Paleocene positive (~ +1‰) around 62 Ma aids in identifying the -Selandian transition across terrestrial and marine records. Regional variations highlight depositional contrasts driven by paleolatitude and basin evolution. In , Paleocene strata record the regression of the , with early marine shales like the Cannonball Formation giving way to Thanetian fluvial sands and coals of the Fort Union and Tongue River Members, reflecting a shift from epicontinental shelf to environments over ~500 km eastward retreat. In , the features limestones such as the Vigny Formation, comprising bioclastic packstones and wackestones up to 10 meters thick, deposited during a brief marine incursion with tectonic control, overlain by brackish clays. On the margin, shelf sequences include the basal Paleocene Lopez de Bertodano Formation equivalents on Seymour and Islands, with mudstones and sandstones recording initial post-extinction siliciclastic input in a high-latitude basin, transitioning to Thanetian deltaic deposits indicative of warming and increased flux. Recent refinements to Paleocene chronostratigraphy, as per the 2024 International Chronostratigraphic Chart updated by the (ICS), incorporate U-Pb dating of zircons from intercalated volcanics and ash layers, providing age constraints with uncertainties below 0.1 million years for stage boundaries—e.g., base at 66.0 ± 0.05 Ma and Thanetian top at 56.0 ± 0.1 Ma—enhancing correlations in non-marine sections. These updates, building on post-2020 ash bed analyses, resolve prior discrepancies from alone and integrate orbital tuning for higher precision.

Paleotectonics and paleogeography

During the Paleocene Epoch, global were dominated by the continued fragmentation of the supercontinents , , and , with significant motions shaping continental configurations. continued its rapid northward drift toward at rates of approximately 15-20 cm per year, approaching the Eurasian margin but prior to the initial stages of the Himalayan collision that would intensify in the Eocene. Concurrently, the opening of the North Atlantic accelerated, driven by rifting between and , with the experiencing major volcanic pulses that facilitated . Along the Pacific margins, zones remained active, including intraoceanic systems spanning the North Pacific, where the and Pacific plates were consumed beneath continental and oceanic arcs, contributing to Andean-type orogeny in the and . Continental layouts reflected the ongoing breakup of and . , comprising , , and , began separating along the nascent North Atlantic rift, with detaching from in distinct phases starting in the late Paleocene, leading to the initial divergence of and . In the Southern Hemisphere, 's fragmentation had advanced such that and were fully isolated, but and remained connected along their eastern margins, forming a that persisted until the early Eocene. This configuration positioned as an isolated microcontinent in the southern , while the core of shifted northward relative to the paleoequator. Key paleogeographic features included the regression of major epicontinental seas due to tectonic uplift and eustatic changes. In , the , which had peaked during the , underwent final regression by the early Paleocene, transitioning from a broad marine embayment to terrestrial environments as uplifted the . Along the emerging North Atlantic margins, early rift basins formed, such as the wide (>300 km) , characterized by hyperextended crust and syn-rift sedimentation that laid the foundation for later oceanic basins. High-resolution paleogeographic reconstructions, informed by integrated paleomagnetic and plate kinematic data, depict major continents undergoing 5-10° of northward latitudinal drift during the Paleocene, consistent with global plate circuit models. These models, updated through 2024 analyses, highlight a world where tropical latitudes expanded slightly due to polar wandering and adjustments, influencing sediment distribution and biogeographic provinces.

Mineral deposits, hydrocarbons, and impact craters

The Paleocene epoch hosts several economically significant deposits, primarily in the form of and gas reservoirs and seams. In the , the Ekofisk Formation, a (early Paleocene) reservoir, forms the basis for major fields such as Ekofisk and West Ekofisk, where hydrocarbons are trapped in naturally fractured layers up to 650 feet thick. These reservoirs, discovered in 1969, have produced billions of barrels of , with late Paleocene shales contributing to source rock potential in the central basin through organic-rich sequences like the Lista Formation. Similarly, in the , Paleocene Wilcox Group sands serve as key reservoirs for deepwater fields, with thick fills and deposits holding significant untapped reserves estimated at hundreds of millions of barrels of equivalent per discovery. deposits are prominent in the of and , where the Paleocene Fort Union Formation contains multibillion-ton subbituminous seams like the Wyodak and , formed in Paleocene wetlands and fluvial environments. Mineral resources from the Paleocene include phosphorites and s linked to specific depositional and volcanic processes. Thanetian (late Paleocene) phosphorites in Morocco's Oued Eddahab Basin, part of the Tethyan phosphate province, form extensive clastic deposits up to 30 meters thick in offshore anoxic settings, supporting major phosphate mining operations. These beds, subdivided into lower, main, and upper layers, reflect upwelling-driven phosphogenesis during the late Paleocene. In the aftermath of volcanism, Paleocene deposits occur in intertrappean sediments of the Matanumadh Formation in , where altered forms (calcium ) layers in saprolitic clays, used industrially for their absorbent properties. Impact craters from the Paleocene provide evidence of extraterrestrial events influencing early geology. The crater, formed at the K-Pg boundary (66 Ma) but filled with early Paleocene ejecta and sediments, exhibits a 90 km diameter and contains impact breccias with Paleocene nannofossil zones NP 8-9, illustrating post-impact deposition in a submarine setting. Recent assessments highlight untapped Paleocene-related resources, particularly gas hydrates along margins. These hydrates, formed in organic-rich Paleocene-Eocene sequences, pose both energy opportunities and climate risks due to dissociation under warming conditions.

Paleoenvironment

Paleoceanography

During the Paleocene, the global ocean basins underwent significant reconfiguration driven by . The proto-Atlantic Ocean widened progressively due to continued initiated in the , with the South Atlantic basins, such as the Argentine and basins, deepening to over 5500 m by the early Eocene transition, facilitating greater water mass exchange. The Tethys Seaway, connecting the proto-Indian and proto-Pacific Oceans, was relatively open but increasingly restricted by the northward drift of the toward , limiting east-west equatorial flow and promoting regional salinity gradients. Southern Ocean gateways, including the and Tasman Gateway, remained shallow (less than 1000 m) or partially closed, restricting circumpolar deep water exchange and contributing to isolated waters. Ocean circulation patterns reflected the era's greenhouse conditions, featuring weak thermohaline overturning due to reduced density contrasts from limited polar ice formation and high global temperatures. Wind-driven prevailed along western continental margins, such as off and , enhancing nutrient supply in s and supporting localized productivity hotspots. Precursors to emerged as cooling around the margin increased density, initiating sluggish deep convection in the , though full modern-scale formation awaited later gateway deepening. Geochemical proxies from marine sediments reveal a warm, stratified regime. Stable oxygen isotopes (δ¹⁸O) in foraminiferal averaged -2‰ to -4‰ (V-PDB) in low-latitude surface waters, indicating sea surface temperatures 8–12°C warmer than modern values and reduced vertical mixing that fostered stratification. Carbon isotopes (δ¹³C) showed subdued gradients between surface and benthic records (∼0.5–1‰), reflecting homogenized carbon reservoirs post-K-Pg due to enhanced riverine inputs and burial shifts. Silica cycling underwent marked changes after the K-Pg boundary, with a transient increase in dissolved silica concentrations from the collapse of calcareous , promoting siliceous and radiolarian dominance before stabilization in the mid-Paleocene.

Climate conditions

The Paleocene epoch featured an ice-free global climate with markedly elevated surface temperatures compared to modern conditions. Equatorial mean annual temperatures reached approximately 30–35°C, while polar regions sustained averages of 10–15°C, yielding an equator-to-pole of roughly 20°C. These values reflect a state without permanent polar ice caps, as inferred from oxygen isotope ratios (δ¹⁸O) in benthic , which indicate sea surface temperatures 5–10°C warmer than present at low latitudes and minimal cooling at high latitudes. Complementary estimates from leaf margin analysis (LMA) of dicot leaves further support these terrestrial air temperatures, showing reduced latitudinal thermal contrasts driven by high atmospheric heat transport. A pronounced atmosphere prevailed during the Paleocene, with atmospheric CO₂ concentrations estimated at 500–1500 ppm, substantially higher than pre-industrial levels of ~280 ppm. These elevated levels stemmed primarily from volcanic outgassing associated with the eruptions, which released vast quantities of CO₂ into the atmosphere and oceans, contributing to long-term warming. Chemical of continental silicates also played a role in modulating CO₂, though insufficient to offset the volcanic inputs during this interval. Proxy reconstructions using stomatal indices from leaves and boron ratios in confirm these CO₂ ranges, highlighting their influence on the era's thermal structure. Precipitation patterns in the Paleocene exhibited strong latitudinal contrasts, with persistently humid conditions in the fostering extensive rainforests and river systems. In contrast, mid-latitude regions experienced seasonal aridity, as evidenced by profiles showing calcic horizons and deposits indicative of periodic dry spells interspersed with wetter phases. These patterns are reconstructed from geochemical signatures in paleosols, such as elevated Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca ratios in authigenic carbonates, which signal increased relative to in subtropical zones. Overall, the hydrological cycle was intensified compared to today, with global mean likely 10–20% higher due to warmer sea surface temperatures enhancing . Zonal climate variations during the Paleocene were shaped by a weaker meridional , resulting in subdued circulation and expanded subtropical high-pressure belts. This configuration extended arid subtropics poleward by 5–10° latitude relative to modern extents, promoting drier conditions in mid-latitudes while allowing moisture convergence to persist nearer the . Paleoclimate models incorporating Paleocene paleogeography and CO₂ forcing reproduce these dynamics, showing reduced intensity due to diminished equator-pole thermal contrasts. heat transport, particularly via strengthened subtropical gyres, further moderated these zonal patterns by distributing warmth and influencing .

Climatic events

Following the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary impact at ~66 Ma, the early epoch experienced a brief but intense event known as the "impact winter," driven by stratospheric soot, dust, and sulfate that blocked sunlight and reduced . This cooling lowered surface ocean temperatures by up to 4–9°C and land temperatures by 6–18°C, with the most severe effects lasting 2–6 years in oceans and 1–5 years on land, followed by gradual recovery over a decade as aerosol concentrations declined. Recovery from this initial perturbation occurred within decades, transitioning to a long-term warming trend of 1–2°C above pre-impact levels, attributed to from impact-vaporized carbonates and burning. Mid-Paleocene hyperthermals, smaller-scale warming episodes than the later Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), included the carbon isotope excursion (CIE) at ~61.75 Ma near the Danian- boundary. This event featured a ~0.6‰ negative δ¹³C shift and a ~0.5‰ decrease in benthic δ¹⁸O, indicating ~2°C deep-sea warming over ~200 kyr, accompanied by reduced carbonate preservation. Likely triggered by volcanic CO₂ pulses from the initial (NAIP) activity, it represents a transient disruption amplified by potential feedbacks like release. The most prominent Paleocene climatic event was the PETM at ~56 Ma, marking the Paleocene-Eocene boundary and causing 5–8°C global warming over ~10–20 kyr, with peak temperatures sustained for ~200 kyr. Driven primarily by massive carbon emissions (~2,000–7,000 Gt C) from dissociation in sediments, triggered by initial or , the event featured a ~4–6‰ negative CIE in marine records, , and enhanced hydrological cycling. Recent 2025 probabilistic modeling of δ¹³C records from multiple sites, using error propagation and functions, extends the PETM CIE duration to 268.8 +21.2/−20.5 kyr, implying prolonged recovery (>145 kyr) beyond prior ~120–230 kyr estimates. In the late Paleocene Thanetian stage (~59–56 Ma), cooling phases interrupted the overall conditions, including a ~3°C event between ~55.45–55 Ma linked to glacio-eustatic fluctuations and increased silicate . These coolings were associated with tectonic uplift, such as mantle-driven elevation of ~550 m in northern European basins during ~62–59 Ma, enhancing and CO₂ drawdown. Regional compressional tectonics from and North Atlantic rifting further contributed to these transient coolings by altering ocean gateways and promoting .

Biodiversity and Recovery

Post-extinction recovery patterns

The Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) mass extinction resulted in the loss of approximately 75% of global species, including non-avian dinosaurs and diverse marine groups, creating vast ecological vacancies across terrestrial and marine realms. In the immediate aftermath during the early stage of the Paleocene, ecosystems were dominated by "disaster taxa" adapted to post-extinction disturbance, such as opportunistic ferns on land and small, generalist mammals like those in the Puercan mammalian fauna, which exploited reduced predation and abundant resources. Marine environments similarly featured resilient, low-diversity assemblages, with initial recolonization by surviving lineages. Recovery began rapidly but unevenly, marked by a —a global surge in fern spores representing up to 90% of terrestrial palynomorphs—that persisted for months to a few years, reflecting pioneer vegetation in sunlit but nutrient-stressed soils. Concurrently, oceanic algal blooms, including opportunistic and nannoplankton, drove elevated export productivity for the first ~300 thousand years, aiding the reestablishment of amid darkened skies and acidified waters. Full restructuring, including complex food webs and habitat stabilization, extended over 5–10 million years, with substantial biotic reorganization achieved by the stage (~61.6–59.2 Ma), as evidenced by continental records showing doubled mammalian taxonomic richness and increases in body size and ecological diversity within the first ~100 thousand years, alongside ongoing floral recovery. At impact sites like the , thriving communities formed within ~30 thousand years, faster than in open ocean basins. A 2025 study highlights how the K-Pg restructured functional diversity in marine ecosystems over short and long timescales. Key drivers included diminished from extinct dominants, enabling opportunistic radiations among survivors, alongside nutrient enrichment from Chicxulub impact ejecta and volcanism, which promoted weathering and fertilization of surface waters. This influx supported heterotrophic and photosynthetic blooms, transitioning ecosystems from survival-mode scarcity to exponential diversification. Biodiversity metrics from updated paleontological (2020–2025) illustrate recovery via diversity curves, with global marine genera rising exponentially from ~300 in the early to ~1,000 by the Paleocene's end, reflecting logistic growth below saturation levels and hotspot continuity from refugia. Terrestrial patterns mirrored this, with mammalian genera doubling within ~100 thousand years post-extinction.

Flora

Following the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction event, Paleocene flora underwent a phased recovery characterized by an initial dominance of pteridophytes, particularly , evident in the widespread "fern spike" in spore records from disturbed ecosystems across , , and other regions. This opportunistic recolonization by , such as those represented by Cyathidites and Laevigatosporites , persisted briefly in the earliest Paleocene before giving way to gymnosperms and angiosperms by the mid-Paleocene ( stage). The transition reflected ecological stabilization, with gymnosperms like regaining presence in recovering forests and angiosperms beginning to diversify rapidly, filling niches left by extinct lineages. Angiosperm radiation accelerated during the Paleocene, marked by the diversification of families such as Nyssaceae and , which contributed to the establishment of modern-like structures. Nyssaceae fossils, including the new genus Browniea with associated foliage and reproductive organs, appear abundantly in North American Paleocene deposits, indicating early to and forest margins. Platanaceae leaves, such as those of Platanus raynoldsii and Macginitiea species, are common in formations like the Fort Union in and , showing lobed forms with palinactinodromous venation. Fossil leaves from these families often exhibit entire margins and drip-tip shapes, suited to humid, subtropical climates that facilitated water shedding in dense, wet environments and correlated with mean annual temperatures around 14–20°C. High-latitude regions during the Paleocene supported extensive polar forests, with broadleaf and elements thriving between approximately 40°N and 80°N due to warmer polar conditions from climates. In the , including sites in the Canadian Arctic, , and , Metasequoia-dominated woodlands formed mixed stands with , creating taxodiaceous swamps in lowland settings tolerant of seasonal darkness and mild winters. Similar assemblages occurred in Antarctic regions, such as , where warmer poles enabled the persistence of these alongside early angiosperm understories. Tropical diversification was prominent in regions like and , as inferred from pollen records in Paleocene sediments. In , early Paleogene pollen spectra reveal increased abundance of angiosperm taxa, including and , suggesting immigration from via tectonic connections and adaptation to warm, seasonal habitats. African pollen floras similarly show floral expansion, with markers for tropical families indicating a peak in diversity during the Paleocene-Eocene transition.

Fauna

The Paleocene epoch marked a pivotal phase in the recovery and diversification of vertebrate and invertebrate faunas following the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event. Mammals, in particular, exhibited rapid adaptive radiation, with early placentals such as Protungulatum appearing in the lowermost Paleocene (Puercan North American Land Mammal Age) as small, insectivorous forms that represented primitive eutherians. Concurrently, marsupials like Peradectes emerged in North American and European faunas, characterized by specialized cranial features adapted for a carnivorous or omnivorous diet, signaling the initial post-extinction establishment of metatherians. By the mid-Paleocene (Torrejonian), condylarths—archaic ungulates such as phenacodontids—became prominent terrestrial herbivores, filling ecological niches left vacant by non-avian dinosaurs, while multituberculates dominated as rodent-like herbivores with specialized dentition for grinding plant material. In the late Paleocene (Thanetian), archaic ungulates further diversified, including larger forms like arctocyonids, which displayed carnivoran-like postcranial adaptations for cursorial locomotion in forested environments. Avian faunas transitioned dramatically, with potential survivors of enantiornithine birds—once dominant in the —experiencing a sharp decline or complete by the early Paleocene, as evidenced by the absence of unequivocal records beyond the boundary. In contrast, neornithine (modern) birds underwent a significant radiation, with basal lineages appearing in North American and African deposits; for instance, early galloanseriform relatives, including stem , are documented from Thanetian sediments, indicating opportunistic exploitation of insect-rich post- habitats. Flightless neornithines also evolved in isolated regions, such as potential ratite-like forms in southern continents, adapting to ground-dwelling lifestyles amid recovering vegetation. Reptilian groups showed resilience and diversification across environments. Crocodylomorphs, including basal neosuchians like Borealosuchus griffithi, persisted in freshwater and coastal settings from the basal Paleocene, preying on recovering and populations. Squamates underwent post-extinction diversification, with such as scincids and other squamates appearing in North American and European localities, with iguanomorph diversification continuing into the Eocene. In freshwater habitats, turtles (e.g., basal pan-carettochelyids) and choristoderes like Champsosaurus thrived, the latter exhibiting crocodylian-like adaptations for aquatic ambush predation in riverine systems. Amphibians rebounded in the humid, forested landscapes of the Paleocene, with anurans (frogs) such as early discoglossids proliferating in environments across and . Urodeles (salamanders), including batrachosauroidids, similarly recovered, favoring moist terrestrial and aquatic habitats. Albanerpetontids, a salamander-like clade, persisted through the epoch, with fossils from Cernay () demonstrating their endurance as small, lizard-resembling forms until the . Marine and freshwater fish assemblages reflected ongoing radiations. Teleosts underwent a major oceanic expansion, with percomorphs and other advanced groups dominating reefs and open waters, capitalizing on reduced predation pressure. Chondrichthyans, including early skates (Rajidae), are recorded from Paleocene deposits, indicating diversification of batoids in shelf seas. In freshwater systems, siluriform catfishes began to diversify during the Paleocene. Invertebrate faunas exhibited high turnover, particularly in marine realms. Insects diversified on land, with diversifying as evidenced by fossils from later deposits showing early social behaviors. Arachnids, including spiders and scorpions, maintained diversity in terrestrial understories. Marine echinoids and mollusks experienced elevated and rates post-boundary, with irregular urchins and gastropods recolonizing seafloors amid changing oxygenation levels. A 2025 study of the Dababiya section in highlights a decline in diversity during early Paleocene cooling (Danian-Selandian), attributing it to reduced oceanic ventilation and productivity that disproportionately affected suspension-feeding communities.

Legacy and Research

Evolutionary significance

The Paleocene epoch marked a pivotal phase in mammalian , characterized by adaptive radiations that filled ecological niches vacated by non-avian dinosaurs following the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction. Early placental mammals underwent rapid diversification, with archaic groups like plesiadapiforms emerging as stem primates; these squirrel-like arboreal forms, represented by genera such as Purgatorius, exhibited key primate traits including forward-facing eyes and grasping hands, laying the groundwork for the origin of crown primates by the late Paleocene. Similarly, miacoid carnivoramorphs, small tree-dwelling mammals ancestral to modern carnivorans, appeared in the early Paleocene, evolving predatory adaptations such as sharpened teeth and agile locomotion to exploit insectivorous and small diets in post-extinction forests. These radiations established the foundational orders of modern mammals, with body size increases and dietary specializations driving the assembly of diverse terrestrial guilds. Avian evolution during the Paleocene reflected a surge in diversification among crown birds (Neornithes), as surviving lineages rapidly speciated to occupy vacant aerial and terrestrial niches. Fossil evidence from early Paleocene sites, such as the Tsidiiyazhi abini specimen from , indicates that basal neoavians underwent phylogenetic and morphological expansions, with innovations in flight capabilities and structures enabling exploitation of seeds, , and small prey. Reptilian lineages, excluding birds, exhibited trends toward miniaturization in squamate survivors like , where post-K-Pg forms reduced in body size—often to under 10 cm—to adapt to fragmented habitats and reduced competition, as seen in diminutive Paleocene iguanians that persisted into the Eocene. This size reduction facilitated burrowing and insectivory, contributing to the resilience of non-avian reptiles in recovering ecosystems. Invertebrate communities experienced significant turnovers, notably the global larger foraminiferal extinction (LFT) at the Paleocene-Eocene (P-E) boundary, which eliminated diverse shallow-marine benthic species and reshaped carbonate platform ecosystems. Recent analyses of Pyrenees sections confirm this event as a synchronous global phenomenon around 56 million years ago, driven by environmental stressors that favored smaller, more resilient forms over larger, symbiont-bearing taxa like Nummulites precursors. This extinction facilitated the rise of Eocene nummulitids, altering marine trophic dynamics and calcification processes in tropical shelves. The Paleocene witnessed the initial assembly of modern trophic webs, with increasing herbivory as a key driver of restructuring through co-evolution between angiosperms and mammals. Angiosperm dominance in Paleocene floras provided diverse foliage and fruits, prompting mammalian herbivores like early perissodactyls and to evolve grinding dentitions and larger guts for processing fibrous plants, thereby enhancing energy transfer in . reconstructions from North American sites reveal a shift toward complexity, with three to four trophic levels emerging by mid-Paleocene, including predator-prey interactions that stabilized community structures akin to those in modern biomes. This co-evolutionary feedback loop between angiosperm diversification and mammalian grazing intensified biomass cycling, setting the stage for terrestrial stability.

Modern analogies and recent studies

The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) serves as a key geological analog for contemporary anthropogenic carbon emissions and rapid global warming, with its ~5–8°C rise driven by massive carbon release into the atmosphere-ocean system mirroring potential future scenarios under unabated CO₂ emissions. Recent analyses highlight how the PETM's disruptions, including and shifts in marine , provide insights into the long-term impacts of human-induced warming, such as prolonged stress beyond initial emission peaks. A 2025 study using probabilistic modeling across multiple sedimentary records emphasizes that the PETM's effects on the could persist for millennia, challenging shorter-duration projections in modern models and underscoring the event's relevance for predicting anthropogenic warming trajectories over centuries to millennia. Updated estimates of the PETM's duration, refined through orbital tuning and cyclostratigraphy, place the full carbon isotope excursion (CIE) at approximately 269 ± 20 kyr, extending the recovery phase to over 145 kyr and indicating a more protracted environmental perturbation than previously thought. This revised timescale, derived from integrated terrestrial and marine records with propagation, suggests that the event's body lasted 200–300 kyr in total, allowing for detailed examination of recovery dynamics via astronomical forcing signals in cyclicity. Such methods enhance the PETM's utility as an analog by revealing how orbital cycles modulated the warming's intensity and duration, with implications for understanding feedback loops in today's conditions. Paleocene recovery patterns demonstrate ecosystem resilience following the Cretaceous-Paleogene , offering lessons for the ongoing sixth mass driven by and habitat loss, as communities rebounded through adaptive radiations over millions of years despite elevated temperatures. Pre-PETM paleoecological shifts, including a ~0.5‰ δ¹³C decrease ~200 kyr prior to the event, involved compositional changes in nannoplankton assemblages—such as declines in Fasciculithus and increases in warm-water and Sphenolithus taxa—across equatorial Pacific and high-latitude southwest Pacific sites, signaling gradual environmental stress that preconditioned ecosystems for hyperthermal impacts. These findings, from 2025 nannofossil analyses, illustrate how prior ecological weakening can amplify risks during abrupt warming, paralleling current declines in vulnerable regions like the . New seismic reflection data from the Guinea Plateau offshore reveal the , an ~8.5-km-wide formed at or near the Cretaceous- boundary (~66 Ma), buried beneath 300–400 m of sediments and featuring a central uplift and terraced floor indicative of marine cratering dynamics. This discovery, interpreted from 2D seismic profiles, suggests the impact triggered regional tectonic disturbances and potential greenhouse gas releases from underlying black shales, contributing to Paleocene climatic precursors through propagation and atmospheric perturbations, although its precise role in the K-Pg remains debated. Complementing this, 2025 research on Eocene hyperthermals documents global warming effects like 1.3–2.0°C rises in the equatorial Atlantic during the "V" event (~49.7 Ma), with enhanced and productivity shifts serving as analogs for Paleocene-Eocene boundary transitions and informing models of tropical ocean responses to early warmth. Ongoing debates in Paleogene research center on the role of in triggering and modulating hyperthermals, with 2025 analyses from the AGU Special Collection "Illuminating a Warmer World" refining models of astronomical influences on sea-level fluctuations and carbon release during events like the PETM. These studies, drawing from system simulations and marine records, debate whether eccentricity-driven insolation peaks initiated volcanic or feedbacks, or if internal variability dominated, using cyclostratigraphic tuning to resolve pacing at millennial to precessional scales. The collection highlights biotic resilience amid greenhouse warmth, integrating proxy data from to the Mediterranean to constrain orbital contributions, advancing predictions for abrupt shifts in a warming .

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
Contribute something
User Avatar
No comments yet.