2.2" Detailed Ginkgo Cranei Fossil Plant Leaf Morton County, ND Paleocene Age COA
Location: Morton County, North Dakota, Sentinel Butte Formation
Weight: 7.7 Ounces
Dimensions: 3.5 Inches Long, 3.5 Inches Wide, 1.1 Inches Thick (Plate)
Leaf Dimensions: 2.2 Inches Long, 2.2 Inches Wide
Comes with a Certificate of Authenticity.
The item pictured is the one you will receive.
This is a genuine fossil
Ginkgo Cranei Fossil Plant Leaf.
At the onset of the Paleocene Epoch, Earth was recovering from the end-Cretaceous asteroid impact. The climate was subtropical almost to the polar circles, ocean temperatures were high, and polar ice caps were absent. The Paleocene Epoch brackets two major events in Earth’s history. It began with the mass extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous, marked by the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary. This was a time marked by the demise of non-avian dinosaurs, giant marine reptiles, and much other fauna and flora. The die-off of the dinosaurs left unfilled ecological niches worldwide. It ended with the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum. This was a geologically brief interval characterized by extreme changes in climate and carbon cycling. Terrestrial Paleocene strata immediately overlying the boundary are in places marked by a “fern spike”: a bed especially rich in fern fossils. Ferns are often the first species to colonize areas damaged by forest fires; thus, the fern spike may indicate post-Chicxulub crater devastation. In general, the Paleocene is marked by the development of modern plant species. Cacti and palm trees appeared. Paleocene and later plant fossils are generally attributed to modern genera or closely related taxa. The warm temperatures worldwide gave rise to thick tropical, sub-tropical, and deciduous forest cover around the globe (the first recognizably modern rainforests), with ice-free polar regions covered with coniferous and deciduous trees. With no large grazing dinosaurs to thin them, Paleocene forests were probably denser than those of the Cretaceous. Flowering plants (angiosperms), first appearing in the Cretaceous, continued to evolve and proliferate, and along with them, coevolved the insects that fed on and pollinated these plants.