位于Cherves-Richemont (Charente)的Purbeckien工厂的壁板和碳化木材的矿化

IF 1.5 3区 地球科学 Q2 PALEONTOLOGY
D. Néraudeau, M. Philippe, Abderrazak El Albani, Jean-David Moreau, France Polette, Jean Saint Martin
{"title":"位于Cherves-Richemont (Charente)的Purbeckien工厂的壁板和碳化木材的矿化","authors":"D. Néraudeau, M. Philippe, Abderrazak El Albani, Jean-David Moreau, France Polette, Jean Saint Martin","doi":"10.5252/geodiversitas2022v44a24","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"RÉSUMÉ Les faciès purbeckiens de Cherves-Richemont, en Charente (SO France), comprennent au-dessus de la série évaporitique des gypses de Chamblanc une série marno-calcaire fossilifère. Dans le secteur de l'Usine, cette série carbonatée présente deux faciès remarquables par leur contenu en bois fossiles carbonatisés. En surface persistent des blocs relictes d'un conglomérat calcaire, disloqué par les labours, riche en encroûtements tubulaires, carbonatés et fibroradiés, d'axes végétaux, associés à des fragments de fusain. Ce faciès conglomératique comporte également des galets d'os de grands reptiles et des écailles de poissons Lepidotes Agassiz, 1832. À environ 40 cm de profondeur, une fouille sur le site a permis de mettre au jour, dans une couche marneuse, des tronçons métriques de bois carbonatisé, encroûtés par des sphérules fibreuses carbonatées. L'analyse géochimique des bois confirme une minéralisation exclusivement carbonatée (ni gypse, ni silice). Les lames minces réalisées dans les bois révèlent une fine carbonatisation à l'échelle cellulaire, surtout hyperblastique ou polyblastique, vraisemblablement d'origine microbienne. La détermination des bois au microscope électronique à balayage permet de les attribuer au genre Agathoxylon Hartig, 1848, témoignage fréquent des gymnospermes mésozoïques. Le milieu de dépôt est interprété comme continental ou margino-littoral. La position stratigraphique de ces faciès à bois carbonatisés, un peu au-dessus des gypses berriasiens de Champblanc, en fait un équivalent latéral probable du site berriasien final à dinosaures et bois fossiles d'Angeac-Charente. ABSTRACT Taphonomy and mineralization of carbonated wood from the Purbeckian facies of l'Usine, Cherves-Richemont (Charente). Lower Cretaceous deposits from the Charentes region, in southwestern France, correspond to Purbeckian facies of continental to brackish environments, locally rich in evaporitic formations (Manès 1850; Pouech et al. 2006, 2014, 2015; Schnyder et al. 2012; Vullo et al. 2014; Moreau et al. 2017b). Three fossiliferous localities have been previously identified: the Berriasian gypsum of Champblanc, near Cherves, with both teeth accumulations and bone beds of fishes, crocodiles and dinosaurs, but relatively poor in fossil wood (Buffetaut et al. 1989; Le Loeuff et al. 1996; Schnyder 2003; Colin et al. 2004; El Albani et al. 2004; Mazin et al. 2006; Rees et al. 2013); the Berriasian marls and calcareous conglomerate of Angeac-Charente, particularly rich in dinosaur megaremains and lignitic accumulations (Néraudeau et al. 2012; Allain et al. 2014; Benoît et al. 2017; Polette et al. 2018; Polette 2019); the Purbeckian to Wealden clay and conglomerate of the Rochefort area, providing large bones of dinosaurs in surface blocks, but never observed in stratigraphical position (Vullo et al. 2012). Another fossiliferous Purbeckian locality from the Charentes region, the Chassiron coast of Oleron Island, is rich in vertebrate and plant remains, but mainly Tithonian in age (Vullo et al. 2014; Moreau et al. 2017b). This paper presents a fourth Charentese Purbeckian locality with the first case of calcite mineralized wood known in Mesozoic deposits from France. The Purbeckian facies is located at Cherves-Richemont, in Charente (SW France), at 3 km east of the Champblanc gypsum quarry, in the L'Usine locality (Figs 1; 2). The stratigraphical position of the marls and the conglomerate with calcite mineralized wood is at mid-distance from the lower to mid-Berriasian gypsum series of the Champblanc quarry, to the east, and the unconformity with the lower Cenomanian sands that erode the Purbeckian series, to the west (Fig. 3) (Coquand 1858, 1862; Platel 1980; Bourgueil et al. 1986). Consequently, the fossil wood locality of L'Usine is a probable lateral equivalent of the uppermost Berriasian bone and wood beds of Angeac-Charente, located at about 25 km only (Gônet et al. 2018; Polette et al. 2018; Rozada 2019). There is no real outcrop at L'Usine, and the limestones with fossil wood can be mainly observed on surface blocks in fields and vineyards. Two outstanding facies, rich in calcite mineralized wood, can be observed. First, the surface of the fields shows abundant relic blocks of a calcareous conglomerate, rich in tubular, fibrous and carbonated incrusting of plant axes, associated to fragments of fusain. The conglomerate contains reptile bone pebbles and Lepidotes Agassiz, 1832 fish scales too. At a depth of 40 cm, an excavation has shown marls containing large pieces of calcite mineralized wood (about 1 m), incrusted by fibrous carbonated spherules (Figs 2; 4). The geochemical analyses of the marls and the fossil wood by X-ray diffraction, realized according to the method of Moore & Reynolds (1997), confirm the mineralization by carbonate only. Dolomite and silica are very scarce and gypsum is lacking (Fig. 5). Polished sections (Fig. 2) and thin sections (Figs 6; 7) of calcite mineralized wood show processes of centripetal mineralization (Higgins 1960; Buurman 1972; Marynowski et al. 2007; Mustoe 2018; Mustoe & Beard 2021). The microscopic observations reveal a fine mineralization at the cell scale, mainly hyperblastic or polyblastic (sometimes oligoblastic, likely of microbial origin. Cell lights are filled by sparry calcite. Some “tuff structures” of wood mineralization are characteristic of certain tuff of filamentous cyanobacteries (e.g. Rivularia C.Agardh ex Bornet & Flahault, 1886, ou Shizothrix Kützing ex Gomont, 1892) common in the geological record (Freytet & Plaziat 1965; Freytet & Plet 1991; Caudwell et al. 1997; Freytet & Verrecchia 1998; Freytet 2000; Pentecost 2003; Hägele et al. 2006; Sanders et al. 2006; Arenas & Jones 2007). A zonation of the mineralization can often been observed on thin sections of wood but corresponds more likely to successive mineralization steps by cyanobacterial mats than to steps of wood growth. The observations of wood fragments with Scanning Electron Microscopy allow to identify a tracheidoxyl (Creber 1972) with araucarioid structures of the genus Agathoxylon Hartig, 1848, a common Mesozoic fossil gymnosperm wood, abundant in the Charentese region of SW France (Fig. 8) (Néraudeau et al. 2002, 2003; Philippe et al. 2008, 2010, 2018; Philippe 2011; Vullo et al. 2014). The pitting is mainly uniseriate, when the punctuation is mainly biseriate for Agathoxylon gardoniense Crié, typical of the mid-Cretaceous deposits of Charentes. Consequently, the Agathoxylon from L'Usine could belong to another palaeoecological morph of A. gardoniense, possibly to another species. The deposit environment that has gathered gymnosperm trunks and branches, eroded reptile bones (e.g. sauropods) and freshwater to brackish fish remains (e.g. Lepidotes) is interpreted as continental to coastal, in freshwater or brackish conditions.","PeriodicalId":55111,"journal":{"name":"Geodiversitas","volume":"44 1","pages":"665 - 682"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Taphonomie et minéralisation de bois carbonatisés du Purbeckien de l'Usine, à Cherves-Richemont (Charente)\",\"authors\":\"D. Néraudeau, M. Philippe, Abderrazak El Albani, Jean-David Moreau, France Polette, Jean Saint Martin\",\"doi\":\"10.5252/geodiversitas2022v44a24\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"RÉSUMÉ Les faciès purbeckiens de Cherves-Richemont, en Charente (SO France), comprennent au-dessus de la série évaporitique des gypses de Chamblanc une série marno-calcaire fossilifère. Dans le secteur de l'Usine, cette série carbonatée présente deux faciès remarquables par leur contenu en bois fossiles carbonatisés. En surface persistent des blocs relictes d'un conglomérat calcaire, disloqué par les labours, riche en encroûtements tubulaires, carbonatés et fibroradiés, d'axes végétaux, associés à des fragments de fusain. Ce faciès conglomératique comporte également des galets d'os de grands reptiles et des écailles de poissons Lepidotes Agassiz, 1832. À environ 40 cm de profondeur, une fouille sur le site a permis de mettre au jour, dans une couche marneuse, des tronçons métriques de bois carbonatisé, encroûtés par des sphérules fibreuses carbonatées. L'analyse géochimique des bois confirme une minéralisation exclusivement carbonatée (ni gypse, ni silice). Les lames minces réalisées dans les bois révèlent une fine carbonatisation à l'échelle cellulaire, surtout hyperblastique ou polyblastique, vraisemblablement d'origine microbienne. La détermination des bois au microscope électronique à balayage permet de les attribuer au genre Agathoxylon Hartig, 1848, témoignage fréquent des gymnospermes mésozoïques. Le milieu de dépôt est interprété comme continental ou margino-littoral. La position stratigraphique de ces faciès à bois carbonatisés, un peu au-dessus des gypses berriasiens de Champblanc, en fait un équivalent latéral probable du site berriasien final à dinosaures et bois fossiles d'Angeac-Charente. ABSTRACT Taphonomy and mineralization of carbonated wood from the Purbeckian facies of l'Usine, Cherves-Richemont (Charente). Lower Cretaceous deposits from the Charentes region, in southwestern France, correspond to Purbeckian facies of continental to brackish environments, locally rich in evaporitic formations (Manès 1850; Pouech et al. 2006, 2014, 2015; Schnyder et al. 2012; Vullo et al. 2014; Moreau et al. 2017b). Three fossiliferous localities have been previously identified: the Berriasian gypsum of Champblanc, near Cherves, with both teeth accumulations and bone beds of fishes, crocodiles and dinosaurs, but relatively poor in fossil wood (Buffetaut et al. 1989; Le Loeuff et al. 1996; Schnyder 2003; Colin et al. 2004; El Albani et al. 2004; Mazin et al. 2006; Rees et al. 2013); the Berriasian marls and calcareous conglomerate of Angeac-Charente, particularly rich in dinosaur megaremains and lignitic accumulations (Néraudeau et al. 2012; Allain et al. 2014; Benoît et al. 2017; Polette et al. 2018; Polette 2019); the Purbeckian to Wealden clay and conglomerate of the Rochefort area, providing large bones of dinosaurs in surface blocks, but never observed in stratigraphical position (Vullo et al. 2012). Another fossiliferous Purbeckian locality from the Charentes region, the Chassiron coast of Oleron Island, is rich in vertebrate and plant remains, but mainly Tithonian in age (Vullo et al. 2014; Moreau et al. 2017b). This paper presents a fourth Charentese Purbeckian locality with the first case of calcite mineralized wood known in Mesozoic deposits from France. The Purbeckian facies is located at Cherves-Richemont, in Charente (SW France), at 3 km east of the Champblanc gypsum quarry, in the L'Usine locality (Figs 1; 2). The stratigraphical position of the marls and the conglomerate with calcite mineralized wood is at mid-distance from the lower to mid-Berriasian gypsum series of the Champblanc quarry, to the east, and the unconformity with the lower Cenomanian sands that erode the Purbeckian series, to the west (Fig. 3) (Coquand 1858, 1862; Platel 1980; Bourgueil et al. 1986). Consequently, the fossil wood locality of L'Usine is a probable lateral equivalent of the uppermost Berriasian bone and wood beds of Angeac-Charente, located at about 25 km only (Gônet et al. 2018; Polette et al. 2018; Rozada 2019). There is no real outcrop at L'Usine, and the limestones with fossil wood can be mainly observed on surface blocks in fields and vineyards. Two outstanding facies, rich in calcite mineralized wood, can be observed. First, the surface of the fields shows abundant relic blocks of a calcareous conglomerate, rich in tubular, fibrous and carbonated incrusting of plant axes, associated to fragments of fusain. The conglomerate contains reptile bone pebbles and Lepidotes Agassiz, 1832 fish scales too. At a depth of 40 cm, an excavation has shown marls containing large pieces of calcite mineralized wood (about 1 m), incrusted by fibrous carbonated spherules (Figs 2; 4). The geochemical analyses of the marls and the fossil wood by X-ray diffraction, realized according to the method of Moore & Reynolds (1997), confirm the mineralization by carbonate only. Dolomite and silica are very scarce and gypsum is lacking (Fig. 5). Polished sections (Fig. 2) and thin sections (Figs 6; 7) of calcite mineralized wood show processes of centripetal mineralization (Higgins 1960; Buurman 1972; Marynowski et al. 2007; Mustoe 2018; Mustoe & Beard 2021). The microscopic observations reveal a fine mineralization at the cell scale, mainly hyperblastic or polyblastic (sometimes oligoblastic, likely of microbial origin. Cell lights are filled by sparry calcite. Some “tuff structures” of wood mineralization are characteristic of certain tuff of filamentous cyanobacteries (e.g. Rivularia C.Agardh ex Bornet & Flahault, 1886, ou Shizothrix Kützing ex Gomont, 1892) common in the geological record (Freytet & Plaziat 1965; Freytet & Plet 1991; Caudwell et al. 1997; Freytet & Verrecchia 1998; Freytet 2000; Pentecost 2003; Hägele et al. 2006; Sanders et al. 2006; Arenas & Jones 2007). A zonation of the mineralization can often been observed on thin sections of wood but corresponds more likely to successive mineralization steps by cyanobacterial mats than to steps of wood growth. The observations of wood fragments with Scanning Electron Microscopy allow to identify a tracheidoxyl (Creber 1972) with araucarioid structures of the genus Agathoxylon Hartig, 1848, a common Mesozoic fossil gymnosperm wood, abundant in the Charentese region of SW France (Fig. 8) (Néraudeau et al. 2002, 2003; Philippe et al. 2008, 2010, 2018; Philippe 2011; Vullo et al. 2014). The pitting is mainly uniseriate, when the punctuation is mainly biseriate for Agathoxylon gardoniense Crié, typical of the mid-Cretaceous deposits of Charentes. Consequently, the Agathoxylon from L'Usine could belong to another palaeoecological morph of A. gardoniense, possibly to another species. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要:Charente(法国西南部)Cherves Richemont的Purbeckian相包括Chamblanc石膏蒸发岩系列上方的泥灰石灰岩化石系列。在工厂区域,该碳酸盐系列具有两个显著的相,其碳酸盐化化石木材含量。在表面上,存在着由犁脱臼的石灰岩砾岩的结块,富含管状、碳酸盐和纤维辐射结壳,植物轴与木炭碎片相关。该砾岩相还包括大型爬行动物的骨卵石和鳞状鳞状鱼类阿加西,1832年。在大约40厘米深的地方,现场挖掘发现,在泥灰岩层中,碳酸化木材的公制部分被碳酸盐纤维球体包围。木材的地球化学分析证实了完全碳酸盐矿化(既不是石膏也不是二氧化硅)。木材中的薄叶片在细胞水平上显示出精细的碳酸化,特别是增生性或多细胞性,可能是微生物来源。通过扫描电子显微镜对木材的测定,可以将其归因于Agathoxylon Hartig属,1848年,这是中生代裸子植物的常见证据。沉积介质被解释为大陆性或边缘沿海。这些碳酸化木材相的地层位置略高于Champblanc的Berriasian石膏,可能是Angeac Charente最终Berriasian恐龙和木材化石遗址的横向等效物。L'Usine,Cherves Richemont(Charente)Purbeckian面碳酸木材的抽象表皮和矿化。法国西南部Charentes地区的下白垩纪沉积物对应于大陆至Brackish环境的Purbeckian面,蒸发地层局部丰富(Manès 1850;Pouech等人,2006年、2014年、2015年;Schnyder等人,2012年;Vullo等人,2014;Moreau等人,2017b)。先前已确定了三个化石位置:Cherves附近Champblanc的Berriasian石膏,鱼类、鳄鱼和恐龙的牙齿和骨床都有,但化石林相对贫瘠(Buffeaut等人,1989年;Le Loeuff等人,1996年;Schnyder 2003年;Colin等人,2004年;El Albani等人,2004;Mazin等人,2006年;Rees等人,2013年);Angeac-Charente的Berriasian Marls和钙质团聚体,恐龙巨手和木质堆积特别丰富(Néraudeau等人,2012年;Allain等人,2014年;Benoît等人,2017年;Polette等人,2018年;Polette 2019年);罗什福地区的Purbeckian至Wealden粘土和砾岩,在地表区块中提供了大量恐龙骨骼,但从未在地层位置观察到(Vullo等人,2012年)。奥列隆岛Chassiron海岸Charentes地区的另一个化石Purbeckian位置,脊椎动物和植物遗骸丰富,但主要是铁龙(Vullo等人,2014年;Moreau等人,2017b)。本文介绍了第四个Charentese Purbeckian位置,其中第一个案例是法国中生代矿床中已知的方解石矿化木材。Purbeckian Faces位于法国西南部Charente的Cherves Richemont,位于L'Usine位置Champblanc石膏采石场以东3公里处(图1;图2)。Marls和方解石矿化木材砾岩的地层位置从Champblanc采石场的下至中Berriasian石膏系列向东,与侵蚀Purbeckian系列向西的下Cenomanian砂岩不一致(图3)(Coquand 18581862;Platel 1980;Bourgueil等人,1986)。因此,该植物的化石木材位置可能与Angeac Charente的上贝里亚骨和木床横向等效,仅位于约25 km处(Gônet等人,2018;Polette等人,2018年;Rozada 2019年)。工厂里没有真正的外植物,在田地和葡萄园的表层上主要可以看到含有化石木材的石灰岩。可以观察到两个杰出的面孔,富含方解石矿化木材。首先,场地表面显示了大量钙质砾岩的遗迹块,富含与木炭碎片相关的植物轴的管状、纤维和碳酸盐镶嵌物。该集团包含爬行动物骨卵石和鳞翅目阿加西,1832年的鱼鳞也一样。在40厘米的深度,一次挖掘显示,泥炭中含有大量方解石矿物化木材(约1米),镶嵌有纤维碳酸盐球体(图2;图4)。根据Moore&Reynolds(1997)的方法,通过X射线衍射对岩屑和化石木材进行的地球化学分析证实了仅碳酸盐矿化。白云石和二氧化硅非常坚硬,石膏不足(图5)。抛光部分(图。
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Taphonomie et minéralisation de bois carbonatisés du Purbeckien de l'Usine, à Cherves-Richemont (Charente)
RÉSUMÉ Les faciès purbeckiens de Cherves-Richemont, en Charente (SO France), comprennent au-dessus de la série évaporitique des gypses de Chamblanc une série marno-calcaire fossilifère. Dans le secteur de l'Usine, cette série carbonatée présente deux faciès remarquables par leur contenu en bois fossiles carbonatisés. En surface persistent des blocs relictes d'un conglomérat calcaire, disloqué par les labours, riche en encroûtements tubulaires, carbonatés et fibroradiés, d'axes végétaux, associés à des fragments de fusain. Ce faciès conglomératique comporte également des galets d'os de grands reptiles et des écailles de poissons Lepidotes Agassiz, 1832. À environ 40 cm de profondeur, une fouille sur le site a permis de mettre au jour, dans une couche marneuse, des tronçons métriques de bois carbonatisé, encroûtés par des sphérules fibreuses carbonatées. L'analyse géochimique des bois confirme une minéralisation exclusivement carbonatée (ni gypse, ni silice). Les lames minces réalisées dans les bois révèlent une fine carbonatisation à l'échelle cellulaire, surtout hyperblastique ou polyblastique, vraisemblablement d'origine microbienne. La détermination des bois au microscope électronique à balayage permet de les attribuer au genre Agathoxylon Hartig, 1848, témoignage fréquent des gymnospermes mésozoïques. Le milieu de dépôt est interprété comme continental ou margino-littoral. La position stratigraphique de ces faciès à bois carbonatisés, un peu au-dessus des gypses berriasiens de Champblanc, en fait un équivalent latéral probable du site berriasien final à dinosaures et bois fossiles d'Angeac-Charente. ABSTRACT Taphonomy and mineralization of carbonated wood from the Purbeckian facies of l'Usine, Cherves-Richemont (Charente). Lower Cretaceous deposits from the Charentes region, in southwestern France, correspond to Purbeckian facies of continental to brackish environments, locally rich in evaporitic formations (Manès 1850; Pouech et al. 2006, 2014, 2015; Schnyder et al. 2012; Vullo et al. 2014; Moreau et al. 2017b). Three fossiliferous localities have been previously identified: the Berriasian gypsum of Champblanc, near Cherves, with both teeth accumulations and bone beds of fishes, crocodiles and dinosaurs, but relatively poor in fossil wood (Buffetaut et al. 1989; Le Loeuff et al. 1996; Schnyder 2003; Colin et al. 2004; El Albani et al. 2004; Mazin et al. 2006; Rees et al. 2013); the Berriasian marls and calcareous conglomerate of Angeac-Charente, particularly rich in dinosaur megaremains and lignitic accumulations (Néraudeau et al. 2012; Allain et al. 2014; Benoît et al. 2017; Polette et al. 2018; Polette 2019); the Purbeckian to Wealden clay and conglomerate of the Rochefort area, providing large bones of dinosaurs in surface blocks, but never observed in stratigraphical position (Vullo et al. 2012). Another fossiliferous Purbeckian locality from the Charentes region, the Chassiron coast of Oleron Island, is rich in vertebrate and plant remains, but mainly Tithonian in age (Vullo et al. 2014; Moreau et al. 2017b). This paper presents a fourth Charentese Purbeckian locality with the first case of calcite mineralized wood known in Mesozoic deposits from France. The Purbeckian facies is located at Cherves-Richemont, in Charente (SW France), at 3 km east of the Champblanc gypsum quarry, in the L'Usine locality (Figs 1; 2). The stratigraphical position of the marls and the conglomerate with calcite mineralized wood is at mid-distance from the lower to mid-Berriasian gypsum series of the Champblanc quarry, to the east, and the unconformity with the lower Cenomanian sands that erode the Purbeckian series, to the west (Fig. 3) (Coquand 1858, 1862; Platel 1980; Bourgueil et al. 1986). Consequently, the fossil wood locality of L'Usine is a probable lateral equivalent of the uppermost Berriasian bone and wood beds of Angeac-Charente, located at about 25 km only (Gônet et al. 2018; Polette et al. 2018; Rozada 2019). There is no real outcrop at L'Usine, and the limestones with fossil wood can be mainly observed on surface blocks in fields and vineyards. Two outstanding facies, rich in calcite mineralized wood, can be observed. First, the surface of the fields shows abundant relic blocks of a calcareous conglomerate, rich in tubular, fibrous and carbonated incrusting of plant axes, associated to fragments of fusain. The conglomerate contains reptile bone pebbles and Lepidotes Agassiz, 1832 fish scales too. At a depth of 40 cm, an excavation has shown marls containing large pieces of calcite mineralized wood (about 1 m), incrusted by fibrous carbonated spherules (Figs 2; 4). The geochemical analyses of the marls and the fossil wood by X-ray diffraction, realized according to the method of Moore & Reynolds (1997), confirm the mineralization by carbonate only. Dolomite and silica are very scarce and gypsum is lacking (Fig. 5). Polished sections (Fig. 2) and thin sections (Figs 6; 7) of calcite mineralized wood show processes of centripetal mineralization (Higgins 1960; Buurman 1972; Marynowski et al. 2007; Mustoe 2018; Mustoe & Beard 2021). The microscopic observations reveal a fine mineralization at the cell scale, mainly hyperblastic or polyblastic (sometimes oligoblastic, likely of microbial origin. Cell lights are filled by sparry calcite. Some “tuff structures” of wood mineralization are characteristic of certain tuff of filamentous cyanobacteries (e.g. Rivularia C.Agardh ex Bornet & Flahault, 1886, ou Shizothrix Kützing ex Gomont, 1892) common in the geological record (Freytet & Plaziat 1965; Freytet & Plet 1991; Caudwell et al. 1997; Freytet & Verrecchia 1998; Freytet 2000; Pentecost 2003; Hägele et al. 2006; Sanders et al. 2006; Arenas & Jones 2007). A zonation of the mineralization can often been observed on thin sections of wood but corresponds more likely to successive mineralization steps by cyanobacterial mats than to steps of wood growth. The observations of wood fragments with Scanning Electron Microscopy allow to identify a tracheidoxyl (Creber 1972) with araucarioid structures of the genus Agathoxylon Hartig, 1848, a common Mesozoic fossil gymnosperm wood, abundant in the Charentese region of SW France (Fig. 8) (Néraudeau et al. 2002, 2003; Philippe et al. 2008, 2010, 2018; Philippe 2011; Vullo et al. 2014). The pitting is mainly uniseriate, when the punctuation is mainly biseriate for Agathoxylon gardoniense Crié, typical of the mid-Cretaceous deposits of Charentes. Consequently, the Agathoxylon from L'Usine could belong to another palaeoecological morph of A. gardoniense, possibly to another species. The deposit environment that has gathered gymnosperm trunks and branches, eroded reptile bones (e.g. sauropods) and freshwater to brackish fish remains (e.g. Lepidotes) is interpreted as continental to coastal, in freshwater or brackish conditions.
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来源期刊
Geodiversitas
Geodiversitas 地学-古生物学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
31
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Geodiversitas is a fully electronic journal, with a continuous publication stream, devoted to varied aspects of Earth Sciences. It publishes original results particularly on systematics, phylogeny, paleobiodiversity and paleoenvironment. Thematic issues may also be published under the responsibility of a guest editor.
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