PLANT LIFE AND CLIMATE
Some idea of the Mesozoic climate is obtained from the character and distribution of the plant life. Triassic floras are not large and there is very little fossil evidence for the earlier half of the period. It is quite possible that arid or desert conditions prevailed for a time in much of North America, as at the close of the Paleozoic era. Plant life was at first not abundant, and conditions were unfavorable for the production of fossils. In Upper Triassic rocks of Virginia, however, there are signs of swampy conditions, with rushes and ferns predominating. Adjoining forest areas were well timbered with large coniferous evergreens which show no annual growth rings, as similar trees do in regions where cold winters alternate with warm summers. This suggests, for that time and place at least, a uniformly warm climate, lacking seasonal variations. Warm temperature or subtropical climates are indicated again by some of the Jurassic and Cretaceous plants, but intervals of lower temperatures and variable climates are also apparent. Palms, figs, and other trees, very similar to modern types now living only in warmer regions, were widely distributed in late Cretaceous time, and their range was extended into regions which have since become too cold to support such growths.
The trend toward modern forms in the plant world was gradual, but throughout the era there were occasional novelties that attract the attention of botanists. Ferns and horsetail rushes, reminiscent of the Paleozoic forests, soon began to lose their prominence as the seed-bearing trees gained the ascendency. Mesozoic time could well be called the age of cycads, because of the striking performance of this plant group. Different varieties flourished in the three periods, with the Jurassic standing out as the time of greatest abundance.
To the uninitiated, the usual cycad fossils resemble “petrified pineapples,” but these are merely the scarred stems or trunks of small to medium-sized trees with a tufted arrangement of leaves at the top, and usually without branches. Foliage and habit of growth suggest something more like large ferns or low-growing palms, with short, thick trunks seldom more than fifteen feet tall and many of them under three feet. The leaves are rarely found entire or attached to the trunks, but occasional discoveries indicate a leaf-length of about ten feet. Although they are classed among the first and lowest of seed-bearing plants, and in this respect are related to the conifers, their appearance was quite unlike that of the modern cone-bearing evergreens.
More nearly resembling the common conifers of today were the sequoias, of early Mesozoic origin and far more abundant during Cretaceous time than they are at present. The maidenhair trees, now represented by a single species of Ginkgo which is cultivated principally in China and Japan, were never very prominent but are of interest as an ancient family that persisted throughout the Mesozoic and down to our own time. Before the close of the Cretaceous period the flowering plants had greatly outnumbered the spore-bearing groups, such as the ferns and horsetails which were formerly so abundant. We know little of early flowers, however, except in connection with trees, the large gayly colored blossoms of the type now conspicuous in woodlands, meadows, and gardens being later arrivals and poor subjects for preservation as fossils.
Cretaceous floras were surprisingly modern in character, far in advance of the animal life. Poplars, plane trees, magnolias, palms, figs, oaks, and buckthorns were abundant at the close of the Cretaceous, as indicated by fossils of the Laramie formation, which is the surface rock in many localities near Denver. Also abundant in various places at this time were walnut, hazelnut, laurel, tulip, maple, beech, birch, breadfruit, ivy, holly, and many other well-known trees and shrubs. Sedges and grasses, which became so important to the herbivorous mammals of the next era, made their first appearance in Cretaceous time but were then inconspicuous.