Cleal, C.J. & Thomas, B.A. 1995. Palaeozoic Palaeobotany of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 9. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 61090 6. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Glenarbuck
R.M. Bateman and C.J. Cleal
Highlights
Glenarbuck has yielded an important assemblage of Visean plant petrifactions that is richest in arborescent lycopsids and ferns, including several endemic species. The plants probably grew in a clastic swamp environment.
Introduction
This Lower Carboniferous locality
Description
Stratigraphy
The 12 m-thick Glenarbuck sequence
The sediments consist of siltstones (including reworked volcanigenic material) and shales with thin, often discontinuous coals and abundant, apparently in situ rootlets delimiting several palaeosols. They are probably river channel and flood plain deposits, suggesting that the plants represent a local swamp community.
Palaeobotany
This locality is significant mainly for the petrified plant fossils, which include the following species:
Lycopsida:
Paralycopodites brevifolius (Williamson) Morey and Morey
'Lepidodendron' solenofolium Smith
Lepidophloios kilpatrickense Smith
Lepidocarpon wildianum Scott
Stigmaria ficoides (Sternberg) Brongniart
Equisetopsida:
Protocalamites goeppertii (Solms-Laubach) Bateman
Filicopsida:
Metadineuron ellipticum (Kidston) Galtier
Metaclepsydropsis duplex Williamson
Botryopteris antiqua Kidston
Lagenostomopsida:
Heterangium grievii Williamson
Lyginorachis brownii Calder
Endoxylon zonatum (Kidston) Scott
Uncertain affinities:
cf. Mittagia seminiformis Lignier
In addition, there are adpressions of lepidodendrid twigs' (Smith, 1960); possibly Lepidophloios kilpatrickensis Smith, Stigmaria ficoides (Sternberg) Brongniart, and Aneimites acadica Dawson.
Interpretation
The main interest of the site lies in its apparently endemic lycopsid species (Smith, 1962c). 'Lepidodendron' solenofolium is known from only two specimens, a small twig and a larger branch, both with attached leaves. It is characterized by protostelic axes and leaf cushions with prominent lateral 'wings'. The several known axes of Lepidophloios kilpatrickensis are protostelic and range in diameter from 5 to 20 mm. Their leaf cushions are almost equidimensional and approach those of Lepidodendron sensu lato in outline. The anatomy of L. kilpatrickensis was used by Smith (1962c) to speculate that the primary cortex of these lycopsids remained meristematic for much of the plant's life. This is one of the earliest known diverse assemblages of arborescent lycopsids that show details of the axial anatomy; the ferns too are important. It contrasts with the majority of Lower Carboniferous petrifaction assemblages, which are dominated by seed-ferns and ferns.
This is the only known locality for the lagenostomalean rachis Lyginorachis brownii, which is characterized by a corrugated, 'U'-shaped vascular bundle. Another probable pteridosperm is the petrified axis Endoxylon zonatum. It has eight endarch protoxylem strands, and widely-separated, undivided leaf-traces; the secondary wood has narrow tracheids and very small, uniseriate rays (Lacey, 1953). It is associated with the adpression foliage Aneimites acadica, although they have not been found in organic connection.
Glenarbuck has yielded a small but important amount of palaeobotanical material that is important for showing anatomical details of several early arborescent lycopsids and ferns. It is the type locality for the pteridosperm frond Lyginorachis brownii and one of only two known localities for Endoxylon zonatum. It is also the only British locality for the enigmatic cf. Mittagia seminiformis, a reproductive organ of questionable affinities that was suggested as a possible precursor of the seed plants by Emberger (1968). Palaeoecologically, the site is of interest because it probably represents a swamp community of the same age and depositional environment as the uppermost community found nearby at Loch Humphrey Burn (see previous section).
Conclusion
Glenarbuck has yielded an important anatomically-preserved assemblage of plant fossils about 340 million years old. They indicate the presence of about ten whole-plant species, which formed a clastic swamp community that was dominated by lycopsid trees with subordinate seed plants. The lycopsid species, which have only ever been found at this locality, are distantly related to small, herbaceous living plants known as club-mosses. The flora provides an interesting contrast with the main plant-bearing units found at the nearby Loch Humphrey Burn (see previous section), which contain fluvially-transported plant fossils. These communities, which were dominated by seed plants and their immediate progymnospermous ancestors, are thought to immediately pre-date those at Glenarbuck.