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Geological and Ichthyological Investigations into Palaeodrainage Hypothesis for the Tennessee ... PDF

158 Pages·2016·14.14 MB·English
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TThhee UUnniivveerrssiittyy ooff SSoouutthheerrnn MMiissssiissssiippppii TThhee AAqquuiillaa DDiiggiittaall CCoommmmuunniittyy Dissertations Fall 12-2010 GGeeoollooggiiccaall aanndd IIcchhtthhyyoollooggiiccaall IInnvveessttiiggaattiioonnss iinnttoo PPaallaaeeooddrraaiinnaaggee HHyyppootthheessiiss ffoorr tthhee TTeennnneesssseeee RRiivveerr Andrea Karen Persons University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations Part of the Biology Commons, Marine Biology Commons, Other Life Sciences Commons, and the Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology Commons RReeccoommmmeennddeedd CCiittaattiioonn Persons, Andrea Karen, "Geological and Ichthyological Investigations into Palaeodrainage Hypothesis for the Tennessee River" (2010). Dissertations. 728. https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations/728 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Southern Mississippi GEOLOGICAL AND ICHTHYOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER by Andrea Karen Persons Abstract of a Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy December 2010 ABSTRACT GEOLOGICAL AND ICHTHYOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER by Andrea Karen Persons December 2010 The course of the ancestral Tennessee River has been debated in both the geological and biological literature for over 100 years. Several of the proposed courses for the ancestral Tennessee place its course across the state of Mississippi. Geochemical analysis of sedimentary rocks in the Pascagoula River basin supports these hypotheses suggesting that the rocks in the Pascagoula basin were derived from the Highland Rim of Tennessee and northern Alabama, while geochemical analysis of rocks from the Pearl River basin point to deposition from a mixture of sources including the ancestral Mississippi River and perhaps the ancestral Tennessee. To delve deeper into the history of the Tennessee River, the phylogenetic systematics of the Etheostoma subgenus Doration were used to further test these hypotheses. Results of the phylogenetic analyses suggest that the members of Doration along the Highland Rim are diverged from not only the remaining Doration, but also from one another due to the breaching of the Fort Payne chert atop the Nashville Dome during the Miocene. From the phylogenetic analyses, it is unclear whether the ancestral Tennessee crossed Mississippi, but a couple of patterns are evident. First, the results suggest that a stream capture event occurred between Bear Creek of the lower Tennessee drainage and one of the eastern tributaries to the Tombigbee River of the Mobile basin. Second, Etheostoma stigmaeum from the Pascagoula River basin are consistently recovered as monophyletic. When coupled with the geological evidence, these findings suggest that the history of Pascagoula River basin may be independent of its neighboring drainages on the coastal plain, possibly due to the mobilization of salt domes in the subsurface of the Gulf of Mexico coastal plain. ii COPYRIGHT BY ANDREA KAREN PERSONS 2010 The University of Southern Mississippi GEOLOGICAL AND ICHTHYOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER by Andrea Karen Persons A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Approved: Mac H. Alford Director David M. Patrick William T. Slack Jennifer M. Walker Robert M. Wood Susan A. Siltanen Dean of the Graduate School December 2010 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank my major advisor, Dr. Mac Alford, and my committee members, Drs. David Patrick, Todd Slack, Jennifer Walker, and Rob Wood, for their invaluable advice on ways to improve this project as well as the encouragement needed to make it to the finish line. I am especially grateful to Todd Slack for assistance in collecting fishes, for providing tissue samples, and for the rides to the SFC meetings. I owe a big thank you to Dr. Bernie Kuhajda of the University of Alabama. No one is more knowledgeable on the fishes of the southeastern United States, and this project would not have been possible without the tissue samples and advice on sampling methods and collecting localities that Bernie provided. This project was greatly enhanced by the tissue samples provided by Dr. Steven Powers of Roanoke College, Dr. Tom Near of Yale University, Matt Thomas of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, and Jeff Simmons of the Tennessee Valley Authority. Also, insights shared by Dr. Darrell Schmitz, Dr. Casey Dillman, Brook Fluker, and Heath Howell were invaluable. I thank each of you for your generous assistance. I would also like to thank Drs. Shiao Wang, Jake Schaefer and Brian Kreiser. Dr. Wang generously allowed the use of lab equipment, and Dr. Schaefer and Dr. Kreiser provided samples. Dr. Kreiser also helped to troubleshoot PCR problems and provided advice on which genes would be useful for this study. The geological portion of this study would not have been possible without the guidance of Dr. Gail Russell, who provided chert samples and helped me to determine which geochemical analyses to employ. Dr. Maurice Meylan provided advice on ways to improve the study and information on collection localities. Lin Pope helped in the identification of geological samples, and Dr. George Raber and Tommy Dye provided invaluable GIS assistance. Thank you all for iii sharing your knowledge with me and for making me feel welcomed in the geography and geology department. I especially want to thank Drs. Alan Shiller and Kevin Yeager of the USM Center for Trace Analysis in the Department of Marine Science for preparing and performing the mass spectrometry of the chert samples. My unofficial little brother, Lance Wilson, and my unofficial little sister, Kristen Sorrell, helped with the collection of geological samples. In addition, Lance also helped troubleshoot GIS problems. Scott Clark, Liliana Hernández, Wilfredo Matamoros, Paul Mickle, Danny Millican, Tharanga Samarakoon, and Brianna Zuber helped with the collection of ichthyological samples. Many thanks to each of you. In addition, I want to thank the Varnado family – David, Edie, and daughters, Isidora, Eleni, and Nina, who were kind enough to allow us access to their beautiful property to make a collection. Thanks to each of you for your hospitality. Portions of this study were funded by grants from the Geological Society of America, the Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies, and by a GAANN Fellowship administered through the College of Science and Technology at The University of Southern Mississippi. Thank you to Dr. Diana Flosenzier was instrumental in the administration of the GAANN Fellowship. Most people come with a lawyer and an accountant. I come with an orthopaedic surgeon and a team of physical therapists. I especially want to thank Michael J. Stonnington, M. D. for sewing me back together three times as well as Julie Melançon-Falla, Quin Sirmon, and Anna Katharine Moore for treating me like family and for keeping me on the move. Your encouragement has meant so much. Lastly, I owe my greatest debt of gratitude to my parents, Gene and Janie Persons. They have continually supported me and have always encouraged me to pursue my own path. My dad even decided to spend part of his retirement helping me to collect fishes and can now readily identify a darter. Thank you both. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT.....................................................................................................................................ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS..............................................................................................................iii LIST OF TABLES.........................................................................................................................vii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS........................................................................................................viii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS..........................................................................................................x CHAPTER I. PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER..........1 Introduction Palaeodrainage Hypotheses Connecting the Tennessee and Mobile Basins Additional Palaeodrainage Hypotheses Could Hayes and Campbell (1894) and Hayes (1899) Have Been Right? Potential Connection via the Sequatchie Valley Hypotheses Placing the Course of the Ancestral Tennessee across Mississippi Conclusions Literature Cited II. GEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER: USE OF RARE EARTH ELEMENTS TO ASSESS THE ORIGIN OF THE CITRONELLE GRAVELS IN MISSISSIPPI..................................................................................................34 Introduction The Citronelle Controversies The Fort Payne Formation Use of REE Signatures to Determine Chert Provenance Methods and Materials Results Discussion Conclusions Literature Cited III. ICHTHYOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER: INSIGHTS FROM MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSES AND BIOGEOGRAPHY OF THE ETHEOSTOMA SUBGENUS DORATION (TELEOSTEI: PERCIDAE) .............................................................................................................................77 Introduction Previous Studies of the Etheostoma stigmaeum Species Complex v Species Accounts Hypotheses Testing and Expected Results Materials and Methods Results Discussion Conclusions Literature Cited IV. GEOLOGICAL AND ICHTHYOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS INTO PALAEODRAINAGE HYPOTHESES FOR THE TENNESSEE RIVER: A SYNTHESIS OF THE DATA.......................................................................131 APPENDIXES.............................................................................................................................137 vi

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Course of the Ancestral Tennessee Based on Grim (1936), Brown (1967), and. Isphording .. 1894; White, 1904; Adams, 1928; Milici, 1968; Clark, 1989; Self, 2000; Mills and Kaye, 2001) Salamanders . via the Big Black River until one of the northwestward flowing streams headcut into the ancestral.
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