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TEST 7 – Amber – Frozen Moments in Time
Amber has a deep fascination both for ordinary people as a gem and for the scientist for whom it
provides a glimpse into the past, a window into history. The majority of amber
which has been discovered
and studied originates in the Cenzoic Era. The earlier Mesozoic which consists of the Cretaceous, Jurassic
and Triassic periods has also produced amber but in smaller and scarcer quantities due to its much older age.
One of the problems associated with Mesozoic amber is the level of degradation it undergoes. Ancient fossil
resin can be badly affected by oxidation, erosion, excessive heat and pressure.
Amber begins as resin exuded from trees millions of years ago possibly to protect themselves against
fungal or insect attack or as a by-product of some form of growth process. Most known deposits of amber
come from various tree species which are now extinct. Baltic amber was produced by a giant tree called
Pinites succinife
r, a tree sharing many characteristics of the currently living genus
Pseudolarix
. The true
reason for this resin discharge from various species of trees is not fully understood.
Scientists have theorised
that it also could be a form of desiccation control, an aid to attract insect pollinators or even a reaction to
storm or weather damage.
The resin from the trees needs to go through a number of stages in order to become amber. The first
stage involves the slow cross chain linking of the molecular structure within the resin, a kind of
polymerisation. This makes the resin hard but easily broken compared to its original state of being soft and
plastic. Once it is in this state, the resin can be called copal. Following the polymerisation the next stage is
the evaporation of volatile oils inside the copal. The oils, called turpenes, slowly permeate out of the amber.
This second stage may take millions of years before the process turns the copal into something approaching
the structure of amber. It is speculated that either one or both of these stages in
the formation of amber must
take place in an anaerobic environment or it may have to sustain a period of immersion in sea water. Amber
which is exposed to air for several years undergoes oxidation which causes a distinct darkening and crusting
of the gem’s surface producing over many years tiny splinters and shards.
The chemical structure of amber is not consistent, not even within a single fragment, let alone a single
deposit. Consequently numerous chemical formulas have been attributed to it. The reason for this wide
variation is simply because amber is not a true mineral; it is an organic plastic with variable mixtures. Some
aspects of amber are fairly consistent though.
On Moh’s scale of hardness it lies between 2 and 2.5. It has a refraction index of 1.54 and a melting
point between 150 - 180oC. The colour range is extremely varied, ranging from near white (osseous)
through
all shades of yellow, brown and red. There are even examples of blue and green amber. Blue - green
amber is thought to have two possible causes: either the permeation of raw resin by mineral deposits present
in the soil into which it fell, or the settling of volcanic dust and ash onto the resin when it was first secreted.
One of the most exciting and interesting aspects of amber are the inclusions, both flora and fauna,
which are found within it. The most frequent inclusions to be found in amber, particularly Baltic, are
examples of the order Diptera or true flies. These tiny flies would have lived on the fungus growing on the
rotting vegetation of the amber forest of which no doubt there was enough to support an enormous
population. Occasionally a small lizard will be found trapped and encased in amber, particularly from the
Dominican Republic deposits. The American Natural History Museum has
a famous example of a
25,000,000 year old gecko.
Another unusual find is the remains of a frog discovered in a piece mined in the Dominican Republic.
At first it was thought to be just one animal with some tissue preserved. The 120 distinct shape of the frog
can be seen but most of the flesh has deteriorated and several bones are exposed, some broken. Under closer
scrutiny a count of the bones suggests that this particular frog must have had at least 6 legs. Palaeontologists
speculate that a bird that ate the frogs may have had a feeding site, perhaps on a branch directly above an
accumulating pool of resin; hence the numerous bones present. The complete frog was perhaps an unlucky
drop by the bird when it alighted on the branch. Mammalian hair can also infrequently be found trapped as
tufts or single strands. When
found in the Baltic area, hair in amber is often attributed to sloths that lived