Sequoiadendron nach ErdzeitalterIch unterscheide Literatur zum Quartär (ab 2,6 ma, Eiszeiten, Sierra Nevada) und Tertiär (ab 65 ma, westliches Nordamerika) weil es sich um verschiedene Lebensräume handelt.
Abkürzungen:
ma = mega-annum oder (einfacher zu merken) million ago = Millionen Jahre 'vor heute'
TertiärNordamerika:[] Axelrod, D. I. Late tertiary evolution of the Sierran big-tree forest. Evolution
13:9-23; 1959.
[] Axelrod, D. I. The Miocene Trapper Creek flora of southern Idaho: Univ. Calif.
Publ. Geol. Sci. 51:1-148; 1964.
[] Axelrod, D. I. "A Pliocene Sequoiadendron forest from western Nevada."
University of California publications in geological sciences. 267 p.
University of California Press (1962).
[] Axelrod, D.I., RAVEN, P. "ORIGIN AND RELATIONSHIPS OF THE CALIFORNIA FLORA."
University of California Publications in Botany, 72.
University of California Press; 1st edition (1978).
[] Axelrod, D. I. "History of the coniferous forests, California and Nevada."
University of California publications in Botany, 70. 62p.
University of California Press (1976).
[] Axelrod, D. I. "Role of Volcanism in Climate and Evolution"
Geological Society of America. Special Paper, No 185
Geological Society of Amer (August 1981)
[] Axelrod, D. I. "New Pleistocene Conifer Records, Coastal California"
University of California Publications in Geological Sciences. 120p.
Univ of California Pr (September 1983).
[] Millar, Constance (1996): Tertiary Vegetation History
Institute of Forest Genetics U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station Albany, California. In: Sierra Nevada Ecosystem Project: Final report to Congress, vol. II, Assessments and scientific basis for management options. Davis: University of California, Centers for Water and Wildland Resources, 1996.
[] Minckley, W. L., D. A. Hendrickson, and C. E. Bond. 1986. Geography of western North American fishes: Description and relationships to intracontinental tectonism. In: The zoogeography of North American fishes, edited by C. H. Hocutt and E. O. Wiley, 519613. New York: Wiley-Interscience.
(Quoted in Millar 'Tertiary': Figure 5.2 "Tertiary coastline of western North America")
[] Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology Educational Series E-45 (2006): Earth Science Week Field Trip October 7 or 8, 2006. Rockin' Along the River. A geologic tour along the Truckee River from Verdi to Wadsworth.
Europa:[] Sturm, Martin: Die eozäne Flora von Messel bei Darmstadt. I. Lauraceae. 1971. S.~1-60, 15~Taf., 5~Abb., 10~Beil.
keywords: flora, Eocene; Eocene; Messel; Darmstadt; Lauraceae, Eocene;
Siehe auch
http://www.schweizerbart.de/j/palaeontographica/pal-b/palB-140-S.html[] UCAR G.; STACCIOLI C. G.; STOLL M. (1996): Chemical composition and ultrastructure of a fossil wood from the genus of ancestral sequoia. In: Holz als Roh- und Werkstoff vol. 54, no6, pp. 411-421 (28 ref.). ISSN 0018-3768 CODEN HOZWAS. Springer, Berlin, ALLEMAGNE (1937) (Revue)
http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=2484994 (Server braucht ziemlich lange)
Quartär:[] Brian F. Atwater, David P. Adam, J. Platt Bradbury, Richard M. Forester, Robert K. Mark, William R. Lettis, G. Reid Fisher, Kenneth W. Gobalet, and Stephen W. Robinson (1986): A fan dam for Tulare Lake, California, and implications for the Wisconsin glacial history of the Sierra Nevada. GSA Bulletin; January 1986; v. 97; no. 1; p. 97-109
[] Owen K. Davis (1999): Pollen analysis of Tulare Lake, California: Great Basin-like vegetation in Central California during the full-glacial and early Holocene. Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA Received 6 July 1998; accepted 8 June 1999. Available online 11 January 2000.
"Giant sequoia was widespread along the Sierra Nevada streams draining into Tulare Lake, prior to 9000 yr B.P."
[] Wallace B. Woolfenden (1996): Quaternary Vegetation History. Sierra Nevada Ecosystem Project: Final report to Congress, vol. II, Assessments and scientific basis for management options. Davis: University of California, Centers for Water and Wildland Resources, 1996. U.S. Forest Service, Inyo National Forest, Lee Vining, California
(About an 11,500-year core taken from the west side of Mono Lake containing Sequoiadendron-Pollen)
[] P.A. Koehler, R. S. Anderson (1994). The paleoecology and stratigraphy of Nichols Meadow, Sierra National Forest, California, USA. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 112 (1994) 1-17.
[] R. Scott Anderson. (1994). Paleohistory of a Giant Sequoia Grove: The Record from
Log Meadow, Sequoia National Park. USDA Forest Service Gen. Tech. Rep.PSW-151.
http://www.fs.fed.us/psw/publications/documents/psw_gtr151/psw_gtr151_07_anderson.pdf