Аннотации:
© 2016 Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung and Springer-Verlag Berlin HeidelbergThe early Permian movement of Gondwana away from the South Pole caused a major climatic change across the continent. The shift from a post-glacial Carboniferous flora to a temperate Permian flora is represented in the palynological record. Using palynofacies analysis, this climate transition can be studied at a high resolution, and the palaeoenvironment can be interpreted on a local scale. Core samples were studied from four localities of the Artinskian/Kungurian-aged No. 2 Coal Seam of the Witbank Coalfield. At some localities, the No. 2 Coal Seam is split into an Upper Coal Seam and a Lower Coal Seam by an intraseam parting, and samples were collected from both horizons as well as the parting. All samples were studied with respect to palynomorph composition and phytoclast content. The results suggest a swamp-dominated environment in the Lower Coal Seam, a river-dominated environment in the parting, and an environment which fluctuated locally from a lake-dominated to swamp-dominated in the Upper Coal Seam due to increased input of glacial meltwater from the hinterlands. The vegetation switched from a fern- and conifer-dominated flora in the Lower Coal Seam to a more diverse Glossopteris-Gangamopteris flora in the Upper Coal Seam. Cordaites appears to be limited to valleys on the northern edge of the swamplands in the Lower Coal Seam. A decrease in monosaccate pollen grains and an increase in bisaccate pollen grains are apparent in all sample sets and interpreted to indicate a transition from a cold to a fluctuating cool-temperate climate. This climate signal is well documented in palynofacies of the coal seam and thus a powerful correlation tool for high-resolution basin-wide and Gondwanan correlation.