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Consortium for Educational Communication Module on FOSSILS AND FOSSILIZATION By Dr. Rouf Hamza Booda Assistant Professor, Department of Botany Government Girls Hr. Sec.Shcool Anantnagh Contact No. 9018862744 Consortium for Educational Communication Text Fossils are the mineralized or otherwise preserved remains or traces of animals, plants, and other organisms. The totality of fossils and their placement in fossiliferous (fossil-containing) rock formations and sedimentary layers (strata) is known as the fossil record. The earliest fossils are about 3100 billion years old. They are of simple prokaryotic organisms like bacteria and cyanobacteria. Earlier fossils were considered products of stars and thunderbolts but Leonardo da Vinci and Bernard Palissy were the first to report that they are the past organisms which lived on the earth. 400-million-year-old fossil plants are the oldest known examples of wood. WHICH THING SHOULD BE REGARDED AS FOSSIL Fossil definition needs careful consideration. The term “fossil” is used for any trace of past life. Fossils are not only the actual remains of organisms, such as teeth, bones, shell, and leaves (body fossils), but also the results of their activity, such as burrows and foot prints (trace fossils), and organic compounds they produce by biochemical processes (chemical fossils). The remains of plants, as in coal or lignite, are usually found in forms of carbon. The remains of animals usually consist of the hard parts of bones, teeth or shells. Traces are such things as footprints, coprolites (i.e. fossil dung or faeces), dwellings, burrows and eggs. Conditions different from those of the present normally excludes an organism which has lived in the last 1000 years or so. The mummy of an ancient Egyptian or Inca, or the skeleton of a bronze age donkey would not be regarded as a fossil. Another defnition of fossils is that they are the remains of animals and plants which lived prior to historical times i.e prehistory. Their study is a specialised branch of geology known as Palaeontology. Schof (1975) defined fossil as any specimen that demonstrated the physical evidence of the occurence of ancient life i,e holocene or older may be regarded as a fossil. Sometimes a demarcation is made between a fossil and a subfossil. Fossil is regarded as an older specimen which has been fossilized before the end of Pleistone epoch; they are completely mineralized and thus changed into fossil. Subfossil is a recent dead body of an organism less than 6000 years old, and is less mineralized. Steward’s definition of fossil as any evidence of prehistoric life seems to be exclusive. Consortium for Educational Communication Some fossil related terms are also common, viz. Pseudo fossils, living fossils and index fossils. Index fossils: These fossils are used in dating of rocks, or act as indicators of petroleum and coal. Living fossils: It is an organism which shows long geographical record and is still living in a limited area. It is not a fossil but it is the oldest representative of a fossil group of organisms which dominated the earth in past. Living fossil is a term used for any living species that closely resembles a species known from fossils. It is as if the fossil had “come to life.” Best example is furnished by Ginkgo biloba. Pseudo fossils: Theses are actually non living things, like rocks which give an illusion of fossils of plant or animals. WHERE TO HUNT FOR FOSSILS: Lagerstatten are the world’s best fossils sites. Fossils are found in rocks. Fossils are found in sedimentary rocks - mainly lime stones, siltstones and mudstones - that were deposited in former lakes, rivers, estuaries, seas and caves. Sedimentary rocks are formed as a result of the deposition of various kinds of sediments like gravel, sand and clay upon the land surface or in the water bodies. These sediments are finally converted into rocks after a long interval of time. Since these rocks are formed in layers, living organisms may become fossilized in them and are available to be dug out by chance. Some of the common sedimentary rocks are lime stone, gypsum, shale, diatomite, rock salt and coal. The general process of fossilization: Fossilization is the process of the formation of fossils, i,e conversion of organisms or their parts into fossils. How are fossils formed: Organisms pass through a number of stages on their way to become fossils, the important stages are: Death: Generally, this is the first stage in fossilization. Death can occur as a result of burial and in this case biostratinomic processes may not take place. Biostratinomic processes: Processes such as reorientation, Consortium for Educational Communication disarticulation, fragmentation, and corrosion, which modify the remains. Thus information is lost. Deposition: Burial of the remains in sediment, where they are less likely to be disturbed. Plant parts are best preserved in very fine grained silts and shales, which are the lithified muds of ancient deposits. Such sediments generally yield excellent fossils because the small grain size preserves minute details of the leaf; coarsergrained sediments such as sands generally do not reproduce delicate features. Plant parts composed of thick-walled cells or those having fibers within their tissues have a better chance of being preserved (fossilization potential). Diagenetic processes: Chemical / physical changes, e.g. permineralization and carbonization. These are necessary for fossilization. Optimum conditions for preservation There are two major requirements for an organism to be preserved as a fossil: 1. It must possess hard parts. 2. It must undergo rapid burial in a protective medium. Various agents can be responsible for the preservation of organisms. Commonly, sediments bury the remains and keep them from being disturbed during the process of fossilization. More unusual agents include lava or volcanic ash, and severe cold or aridity. Temperatures below 4°C (39.2ºF) inhibit bacterial activity and thus, decay of organic matter. Firstly, the organism must be deposited in sediment. Between the time of death and burial, biostratinomic processes alter the remains. Before burial, an organic skeleton is normally subject to reorientation, disarticulation, fragmentation, and corrosion. Once it is buried, it undergoes diagenetic processes. Such changes are necessary for preservation, because organic matter will not survive for long before it is decomposed, and even hard parts, as bones, teeth, calcified shells, Xylem, sclerenchyma, are normally prone to destruction. A typical diagenetic process is mineralization, which can occur with various minerals such as pyrite, phosphates or the Consortium for Educational Communication various forms of silica. Carbonization: Carbonization is a process occurring within the sediment in the absence of oxygen. In such conditions, anaerobic bacteria consume hydrogen and oxygen, therefore concentrating carbon. The final products of carbonization are coal and hydrocarbons, which can be considered accumulations of very badly preserved fossils. Permineralizations Permineralization occurs when the plant tissues are infiltrated with mineral-rich fluid. Minerals (commonly silica, carbonate, phosphate or pyrite) precipitate in cell lumens and intercellular spaces, thus preserving internal structures of plant parts in three dimensions. When mineral matter actually replaces the cell-wall and other internal structures, the preservation may be called petrifaction. Following are important types of permineralization: Silica permineralization (silification commonly occurs in areas where silica-rich volcaniclastic sediments are weathering, for example the famous upright trees in Yellowstone National Park. According to Leo et.al (1976) concentrated watery solution of minerals like salic acid infiltrates the tissues which is followed by intracellular or intercellular polymerization of siloxane bonds and the elimination of water. With the continous growth of polymer the amorphous silica gets deposited from the solution and the water moves out of the plant tissues. Ultimately this silica gets converted into quartz and fossil gets petrified. Silica and especially its most common crystallized form (the mineral quartz), is extremely stable at the Earth’s surface, therefore silicified fossils are likely to withstand modification or damage. Permineralization with calcium carbonate (calcite or dolomite) is particularly common in Carboniferous coal seams, where whole regions of peat were permineralized. Called coal balls because of their round or ellipsoidal shape Carbonate preservation Ideal conditions for carbonate preservation are normally found in marine shelf sediments, with a high biomass of organisms Consortium for Educational Communication that could potentially fossilize. Marine waters are constantly supersaturated with respect to calcium carbonate, and the preservation of carbonate shells is a rather common instance. Pyritization Pyrites are iron-sulfur minerals. These pyritized fossils often occur in the presence of sea water (a source of sulfur), and are characteristic of plant tissues washed into marine basins. Permineralization with phosphate: Phosphatization of soft parts have an unsurpassed degree of preservation, with detailed cellular structure. Muscle fibers are most often preserved through phosphate replacement. Charcoalification Charcoalification can preserve tissues burned in wildfires or buried in pyroclastic flows. Internal structure is often detailed. Types of fossils and their fossilization: There are six main types of fossils, based on the manner of fossilization. 1. Coalified compressions: a fossil containing compressed coalified remains of plants. 2. Authigenic preservations or cementation. Here surface layer of the organism/part is preserved by cementation. In Cementation compacted sediments are cemented by cementing material, like silica or calcium to form sedimentary rock. It shows only surface details of the fossilized organism. Following types are its examples: a). Impressions: Also called imprints are the external features of the past organisms or their partsleft in hardned rock. b). Moulds: These are encasements of hardened mud or minerals that surround a fossilized organism. c). Casts: They are hardened minerals deposited inside the mould. 3. Infiltrated cellular preservations: Here cells and tissues of plants or plant parts are preserved, it shows internal detail of the Consortium for Educational Communication organism. a). Petrifactions: Also called true fossils, because in them cellular details are preserved due to replacement of organic material particle by mineral matter. b). Mummifications: In this type the entire organism is or body part is preserved in some special preserving material so that all its soft body parts are preserved perfectly and remain intact. Thus organic matter has not been replaced by mineral matter in such fossils,.e.g ice preserved fossils. 4. Hard part preservations: Here plants possessing hard parts are preserved, e.g diatoms. 5. Structural fusinite: The coalified plants after charing in forest fire form fossil charcoal, or fusain are called structural fusinites. These fossils show celluar details though cell walls are generally absent. 7. Chemical fossils: These include fossilized plant chemicals, like chlorophyll, DNA and proteins. 1) Coalified compressions: It is a type of fossil that contains compressed coalified remains of plants generally in the form of black carbonaceous film in the rock. The compression retains the original outline of the organism. Compressions are plant parts that have suffered physical deformation such that the three-dimensional plant part is compressed to more-or-less two-dimensions. Compression mainly occurs in plants, retaining coalified organic matter. Well fossilized compressions of leaves shows leaf form, veins, stomata, epidermal hairs, and cuticle. Coal is the best example of compression. Fossilization: Plant part or plant gets buried in sediment layers and under high pressure gets converted into coal. Generally compressions retains their lower surface intact while as upper surface gets distorted. Plant stems and other three-dimensional plant structures do not preserve well under compression. In carbonization, the decompostion of organic matter under anaerobic water or sediment, the hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen are driven off, leaving the carbon residue. This leaves a thin film Consortium for Educational Communication layer of carbon on a rock as evidence of the original organism. What are impressions Impressions are two dimensional imprints of an organism that donot contain any organic material. Impressions are essentially compressions without organic material. Impressions probably represent the most common type of plant fossil. They are formed by dorsiventral or two dimensional plant structures like leaves, and sporophylls. They occur when a plant part is covered by sediment and the water is squeezed from the cells and tissues. Cells that make up the plant are eventually degraded, perhaps as a result of microbial activities, so that only a shallow negative, or imprint, of the plant organ (leaf) remains. Impressions usually occur in fine-grained sediments, such as clay or silt. Impressions may also occur if, when layers of rock are split apart, the organic material adheres to only one side of the rock. In this case, the side with organic material is the compression, known as the “part”, while the corresponding impression known as the “counterpart”. What do impressions tell us: The paleobotanist determines the shape, venation, and other structural features of the leaf and notes any characteristics that make it unusual. An impression is a clue left of the organism’s biological activity; they can be formed while the organism was moving or doing any other biological activity. Some examples of impressions are the trace fossils such as footprints, traces, remains of tunnels left by burrowing organisms, and the holes made in shells by parasites MODULE-6 MOLDS AND CASTS ARE INSIDE OUT FOSSILS OF EACH OTHER Consortium for Educational Communication Casts and Molds When sediment is deposited into cavities left by the decay of plant parts, a cast results. A mold is essentially a cavity left in the sediment by the decayed plant tissue. Molds are generally unfilled, or may be partially filled with sediment. In other words after decay of organism when all that is left is an organism-shaped hole in the rock, it is called a mold fossil or typolite. If this hole subsequently had been filled with other minerals, it is called a cast fossil and is considered a replacement fossil, since the original materials had been completely replaced by new, unrelated ones. Casts and molds may be found together with the cast filling the mold. Molds are formed when soft sediment surrounding the structure lithifies or hardens before the structure decays.When the mold fills in with sediment that subsequently hardens, a cast is formed. Casts of an internal hollow structure like a pith cavity are also common. Like compressions and impressions,casts and molds record external (or sometimes internal) organ features well, Unlike compressions/impressions, molds and casts often are truer records of the original three-dimensional shape of the structure. Fossilization of impression,cast and mould. After burial of the organism in fine clay two processes occur viz decay of the internal organic materialof the buried plant and cementation of the surface sediment. Decaying material develops electric charge which attracts colloidal particles having opposite charge from the surrounding medium. Decaying material create a specific geochemical situation around themselves. Sedimentary material containing iron and carbonate surround the organism and become cemented. This cemented layer preserves the surface features of the organism. The Cast is formed by filling of mould with mineral matter. Petrifications: Petrifications means turning to stone In these fossils tissues are fully or partially replaced or infiltrated by mineral matter so that even cellular details are preserved. These are regarded as best fossils for the study of the internal organisation of the fossilized plant. Consortium for Educational Communication Fossilization process: After burial of the plant in sediments permeation of silicates,iron compounds and carbonates starts between and inside the cells. According to Leo et.al(1976) concentrated watery solution of minerals like salic acid infiltrates the tissues which is followed by intracellular or intercellular polymerization of siloxane bonds and the elimination of water. With the continous growth of polymer the amorphous silica gets deposited from the solution and the water moves out of the plant tissues. Ultimately this silica gets converted into quartz and fossil gets petrified. Mummification: These represent actual remains of an organism, which remain fossilized in ice,volcanic ash or old bogs. They are of the following types. a) Ice embeded fossils: Fossils of mammoths and rhinoceros have been found in the Siberian ice. They belonged to late Pelistocene.Their flesh,skin and hair was intact. b) Preservation in oil saturated environment: Organisms fossilized in oil saturated places preserve their organic parts. Tree trunks found in such places are so well preserved that it is possible to cut them with saw and drive nails. Resin embeded fossils: Amber is a fossilized resin which can preserve insects and pollen grains. Fossilized pollen or spores are called micro fossils or palynofossils. Fossilized insects of Oligocene period have been found preserved in amber, thus amber acts as a nature’s tomb. Amber forms when plant resin is exposed to the air, causing its constituent molecules (terpenes) to cross-link and harden. The substance is very resistant to decay, with the oldest amber found dating to the Late Carboniferous (290 Ma). Amber younger than 40 000 years is termed sub-fossil resin. This is highly useful if the amber has plants or animals trapped inside. Organisms are 3-dimensional with excellent morphological preservation, but their internal structure is dissolved. c) Bog ple and and people: Peat bogs have yielded the famous Bog Peotwo thousand year old humans with intact skin, hair clothing due to the presence of anti-bacterial tannic fulvic acids. Because of the low pH, their bones have Consortium for Educational Communication been dissolved. Hard part preservations: Some resistant plant material like silica and calcium compounds are immune to physiochochemical changes, thus serving in fossilization of the organism. e.g Diatoms containing siliceous and calcareous frustules are the best fossilized plants. Structural fusinite: The coalified plants after charing in forest fire to form fossil charcoal, or fusain are called structural fusinites. These fossils show celluar details though cell walls are generally absent. Molecular Fossils (Chemical fossils): As more becomes known about the chemistry of modern plants, paleobotanists have begun to examine the fossil record for corresponding chemical data. For example, characteristic breakdown products of chlorophylls and lignins have been found in well-preserved fossil leaves. Lipids and their derivatives have also been recovered from sediments. Some carbohydrate breakdown products may also survive in sediment. A special class of these, oleananes, are formed by flowering plants, some ferns and lichens. An increase in abundance of these molecules in sediments of mid to Late Cretaceous age is used to document the increasing abundance of flowering plants. In another stunning example, genetic material was recovered from Tertiary leaves.