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Author Topic: Ancient trees recorded in mines  (Read 657 times)
veritas
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« on: September 08, 2008, 11:59:PM »

            

               Ancient trees recorded in mines             

         
                                                                                               
                                 
           
                                                                                  By Jonathan Amos                                                                          
                                              Science reporter, BBC News, Liverpool                                                  
       

         
                               
         
            Tree (University of Bristol)             
The remains of a tree that grew about 300 million years ago
         
         
               

Spectacular fossil forests have been found in the coal mines of Illinois by a US-UK team of researchers.

The group reported one discovery last year, but has since identified a further five examples.

The ancient vegetation - now turned to rock - is visible in the ceilings of mines covering thousands of hectares.

These were among the first forests to evolve on the planet, Dr Howard Falcon-Lang told the British Association Science Festival in

Liverpool.

"These are the largest fossil forests found anywhere in the world at any point in geological time," he told reporters.

"It is quite extraordinary to find a fossil landscape preserved over such a vast area; and we are talking about an area the size of (the British city of) Bristol."    

   
           
       
     

The forests grew just a few million years apart some 300 million years ago; and are now stacked one on top of another.

It appears the ancient land experienced repeated periods of subsidence and flooding which buried the forests in a vertical sequence.

They have since become visible because of the extensive mining operations in the border area between the states of Illinois, Indiana and Kentucky.                               

            Coal seam (University of Bristol)             
Scientists look up to see what would have been the forest floor
         
                       
          

Once the coal seams have been removed (what were, essentially, the compacted soils of the forests), it is possible to go into the tunnels and look up at what would have been lying on the forest floors.

"It's a really exciting experience to drive down into these mines; it's pitch black," the Bristol University research said.

"It's kind of an odd view looking at a forest bottom-up. You can actually see upright tree stumps that are pointed vertically up above your head with the roots coming down; and adjacent to those tree stumps you see all the litter.

"We found 30m-long trunks that had fallen with their crowns perfectly preserved."           

                
         
            Leaf (University of Bristol)             
Some of the preservation is exquisite
         
         
                 

The researchers believe their study of these ancient forests could give hints to how modern rainforests might react in a warmer world.

The six forests straddle a period in Earth history 306 million years ago that saw a rapid shift from an icehouse climate with big polar ice caps to a greenhouse climate in which the ice caps would have melted.

"The fascinating thing we've discovered is that the rainforests dramatically collapse approximately coincident with the greenhouse warming," explained Dr Falcon-Lang.

"Long-lived forests dominated by giant club moss trees almost overnight (in a geological sense) are replaced by rather weedy fern vegetation."

The next stage of the research is to try to refine the timings of events all those years ago, and work out the exact environmental conditions that existed. The thresholds that triggered the ancient collapse can then be compared with modern circumstances.


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gjwalberg
Guest
« Reply #1 on: September 09, 2008, 10:54:AM »

Oh, the (tree)-manity!

http://www.break.com/usercontent/2008/9/Emotional-Hippies-Crying-Over-Dead-Trees-565864.html

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warning
Member

Posts: 1,152



« Reply #2 on: September 09, 2008, 12:03:PM »

This mine is down the road from Our Lady Of LaSalette (SSPX) in Olivett IL

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“He is therefore not a true lover of the common good who does not desire and work as much as is permissible in his station to make the whole world subject to one monarch.”
William of Ockham d 1347

“GOOD SUCCESS BE TO THE ROMANS, and to the people of the Jews, by sea and by land for ever: and far be the sword and enemy from them.” First Book Of Machabees 8:23

“Fight, children of light, you, the few who can see. For now is the time of all times, the end of all ends.” Our Lady of La Salette

"No ordinary man can discern the beginning of evil, but only the true statesman." Aristotle Politics





veritas
Guest
« Reply #3 on: September 09, 2008, 03:18:PM »

Quote from: warning

This mine is down the road from Our Lady Of LaSalette (SSPX) in Olivett IL



Down the road and mostly under it and the church as well.
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