Coprolites containing plant material from the Carboniferous of Britain

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Coprolites containing plant material from the Carboniferous of Britain

  • Volume / Part: 20 / 1
  • Publication Date: January 1977
  • Page(s): 59 - 68
  • Authored By: Andrew C. Scott

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Coprolites containing plant material are described from the Middle Coal Measures (Westphalian B) of Swillington, near Leeds, West Yorkshire. Other possible coprolites from the Lower Carboniferous (Calciferous Sandstone Series) of the Loch Humphrey Burn and Glenarbuck localities in the Kilpatrick Hills, Strathclyde are also recorded. The Coal Measure specimens contain either lycopod megaspore fragments, indeterminate plant debris, or a large variety of microspores (attributable to Lycopsida, Sphenopsida, Pteropsida; Filicinae, Gymno-spermae, and Pteridospermae) whereas the Lower Carboniferous specimens consist mainly of rolled plant debris. It is suggested that these coprolites belonged to animal litter feeders and is direct evidence of animals eating vegetation in the Palaeozoic.

Palaeontology - Volume 20 Part 1 Pages 59-68



Palaeontology - Volume 20 Part 1 Pages 59-68

Citations

SCOTT, A. C. 1977. Coprolites containing plant material from the Carboniferous of Britain. Palaeontology, 20, 1, 59–68.