Journal
GEOLOGICAL JOURNAL
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages 34-41Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/gj.1229
Keywords
atmospheric oxygen; charcoal; Late Triassic; palaeo-wildlire; permineralization; SW Germany
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So far only very few reports deal with Triassic (especially macro-or mesofossil) charcoal in detail. Here we present the first results of a detailed study of fossil charcoal from Late Triassic sandstones of the Tubingen Sandstein (Exter-Formation, Rhaetian) in the vicinity of Tilbingen in SW Germany. The discovery of charcoal at this locality can be regarded as direct evidence of wildfires in the hinterland of the Rhaetian sea and all charcoal fragments studied so far represent gymnosperm woods. At the moment nothing can be stated about the frequency and extent of such fires, although the occurrence of charcoal in different sandstone-bodies points to more than one fire event. The charcoal content of the marginal marine deposit probably represents a larger region and not only the vegetation in the direct vicinity of the shore. A considerable amount of transport is indicated by abrasion of some of the charcoal fragments and the taphonomic sorting, leading to the selected accumulation of woody fragments. Some charcoal fragments are permineralized by goethite and we assume that in this case the goethite is the primary permineralization agent. Our data support the assumption that during the Late Triassic atmospheric oxygen concentrations were high enough to sustain larger wildfires. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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