期刊文献+

High Temperature as a Mechanism for Plant Cytoplasm Preservation in Fossils 被引量:1

High Temperature as a Mechanism for Plant Cytoplasm Preservation in Fossils
下载PDF
导出
摘要 Because the cytoplasm of a plant normally degrades after the death of the plant, finding cytoplasm in a plant body after a prolonged period of time, especially in fossil plants, is unexpected. Recent work on several 100-Myr-old plant fossils from Kansas, USA indicates, however, that cells and their contents can be preserved. Most of the cells in these fossil plants appear to be in a state of plasmolysis, and these fossil cells bear a strong resemblance to laboratory-baked cells of extant plant tissues. Based on a comparison with extant material plus biophysical and biochemical analyses of the cytoplasm degrading process, a new hypothesis for cytoplasm preservation in nature is proposed: high temperature, a concomitant of commonly seen wildfires, may preserve cytoplasm in fossil plants. This hypothesis implies that fossilized cytoplasm should be rather common and an appropriate substance for research, unlike previously thought. Research on fossil cytoplasm closely integrates paleobotany with biochemistry, biophysics, as well as fire ecology, and invites inputs from these fields to paleobotany to interpret these provocative findings. Because the cytoplasm of a plant normally degrades after the death of the plant, finding cytoplasm in a plant body after a prolonged period of time, especially in fossil plants, is unexpected. Recent work on several 100-Myr-old plant fossils from Kansas, USA indicates, however, that cells and their contents can be preserved. Most of the cells in these fossil plants appear to be in a state of plasmolysis, and these fossil cells bear a strong resemblance to laboratory-baked cells of extant plant tissues. Based on a comparison with extant material plus biophysical and biochemical analyses of the cytoplasm degrading process, a new hypothesis for cytoplasm preservation in nature is proposed: high temperature, a concomitant of commonly seen wildfires, may preserve cytoplasm in fossil plants. This hypothesis implies that fossilized cytoplasm should be rather common and an appropriate substance for research, unlike previously thought. Research on fossil cytoplasm closely integrates paleobotany with biochemistry, biophysics, as well as fire ecology, and invites inputs from these fields to paleobotany to interpret these provocative findings.
作者 WANG Xin
出处 《Acta Geologica Sinica(English Edition)》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2007年第2期183-193,共11页 地质学报(英文版)
基金 the Royal Society K. C. Wong Fellowships China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (No. 2005037746) State Key Laboratory of Palaeobiology and Stratigraphy (Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS, No. 053103) Jiangsu Planned Project for Postdoctoral Research Funds, National Natural Science Foundation of China Program (No. 40632010 and No. J0630967) Sigma Xi Society the Deep Time RCN for their financial support.
关键词 CRETACEOUS wildfire fossil high temperature plant cytoplasm Cretaceous, wildfire, fossil, high temperature, plant cytoplasm
  • 相关文献

参考文献2

  • 1Oliver Heiri,André F. Lotter,Gerry Lemcke.Loss on ignition as a method for estimating organic and carbonate content in sediments: reproducibility and comparability of results[J].Journal of Paleolimnology.2001(1)
  • 2Qiu,L.Zachariah, C, and Hagen, S.J. 2003. Fast chain contraction during protein folding: "foldability" and collapse dynamics[].Physical Review Letters.

同被引文献4

引证文献1

相关作者

内容加载中请稍等...

相关机构

内容加载中请稍等...

相关主题

内容加载中请稍等...

浏览历史

内容加载中请稍等...
;
使用帮助 返回顶部