There is surely many more such
time capsules world wide from every epoch that can be just as important in the
preservation of the local flora and sometimes even the fauna although as Pompeii
showed us that is not too likely.
This informs us even more
clearly, that searching around volcanoes is an excellent idea and for the
stated reasons below. One earns a
detailed window into a point in time allowing safe inferences both forward and
backward.
Most archeological effort has
been aimed at human history and even that rather narrowly. This tells us that those methods need to look
much deeper and much more bravely. The
human contribution may or may not exist and in any event it will be rare but
the history of the flora is well worth understanding.
'Chinese Pompeii '
300m-year-old forest preserved in ash
21 February 2012 Last updated at 11:54 ET
A reconstruction depicts the swampy land that was covered up 300
million years ago
Researchers have unearthed a forest in northern China preserved under a layer of
ash deposited 300 million years ago.
Preservation of the forest, just west of the Inner Mongolian district
of Wuda, has been likened to that of the Italian city of Pompeii .
The researchers were able to "reconstruct" nearly 1,000 sq m
of the forest's trees and plant distributions.
This rare insight into how the region once looked is described in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The excavations sampled three sites across a large expanse that was
covered with about a metre of ash.
Due to the pristine preservation of some of the plants, the team
estimate the ash fell over the course of just a few days, felling and damaging
some of the trees and plants under its weight but otherwise keeping them
intact.
"It's marvelously preserved," said study co-author Hermann
Pfefferkorn of the University of Pennsylvania in the US .
"We can stand there and find a branch with the leaves attached,
and then we find the next branch and the next branch and the next branch. And
then we find the stump from the same tree. That's really exciting."
The team identified six groups of trees, ranging from low-lying tree
ferns to now-extinct 25m trees Sigillaria and Cordaites, as well
well-preserved specimens of another extinct group called Noeggerathiales.
Based on the findings, the team worked with a painter to depict what
the forest would have looked like before the ash cloud descended.
Prof Pfefferkorn said that, as a particularly complete and well-caught
moment in time, the forest would serve as a "baseline" for assessing
future finds.
"It's like Pompeii ,"
he said. "Pompeii gives us deep insight into Roman culture, but it doesn't
say anything about Roman history in and of itself.
"But on the other hand, it elucidates the time before and the time
after. This finding is similar. It's a time capsule and therefore it allows us
now to interpret what happened before or after much better."
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