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Laura C. McParland, Margaret E. Collinson, Andrew C. Scott, David C. Steart, Nathalie V. Grassineau, and Sharon J. Gibbons
Ferns and fires; experimental charring of ferns compared to wood and implications for paleobiology, paleoecology, coal petrology, and isotope geochemistry
Palaios (September 2007), 22(5):528-538

Abstract:
We report the effects of charring on the ferns Osmunda, Pteridium, and Matteucia with coniferous wood (Sequoia) for comparison. Like charred wood, charred ferns shrink, become black and brittle with a silky sheen, and retain three-dimensional cellular structure. Ferns yield recognizable charcoal (up to 800 degrees C) that could potentially survive in the fossil record enabling reconstruction of ancient fire-prone vegetation containing ferns. Charred fossils of herbaceous ferns would indicate surface fires. Like charred wood, cell-wall layers of charred ferns homogenize, and their reflectance values increase with rising temperature. Charcoalified fragments of thick-walled cells from conifer wood or fern tissues are indistinguishable and so cannot be used to infer the nature of source vegetation. Charred conifer wood and charred fern tissues show a relationship between mean random reflectance and temperature of formation and can be used to determine minimum ancient fire temperatures. Both charred conifer wood and charred fern tissues show some tendency toward increasingly lighter delta 13 C values up to charring temperatures of 600 degrees C, which should be taken into account in analyses of delta 13 C in charcoals. Charred fern tissues consistently have significantly more depleted delta 13 C values (< or =4 per mil) than charred wood. Therefore, if an analysis of delta 13 C through time included fern charcoal among a succession of wood charcoals, any related shifts in delta 13 C could be misinterpreted as atmospheric changes or misused as isotope stratigraphic markers. Thus, charcoals of comparable botanical origin and temperatures of formation should be used in order to avoid misinterpretations of shifts in delta 13 C values.

Index Terms/Descriptors:
C-13/C-12; carbon; charcoal; coal; Coniferales; experimental studies; Gymnospermae; isotope ratios; isotopes; laboratory studies; living taxa; Matteucia struthiopteris; modern analogs; Osmunda regalis; paleobiology; paleoecology; Plantae; Pteridium aquilinum; Pteridophyta; sedimentary rocks; SEM data; Sequoia; Sequoia sempervirens; Spermatophyta; stable isotopes; Taxodiaceae; wood

GeoRef, Copyright 2008, American Geological Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), Tulsa, OK, United States