It is well known to geologists that during the Permian and Carboniferous periods the southern portion of Scotland was the scene of widespread volcanic activity. Forests were overwhelmed by lava-streams or showers of ash, and in some districts tree stems and broken plant fragments became sealed up in a volcanic matrix. Laggan Bay in the north-east corner of the Isle of Arran, and Pettycur a short distance from Burntisland on the north shore of the Firth of Forth, are two localities where petrified plants of Carboniferous age occur in such preservation as allows of a minute investigation of their internal structure. The occurrence of plants in the former locality was first discovered by Mr Wünsch of Glasgow; the fossils occur in association with hardened shales and beds of ash, and are often exceedingly well preserved[127]. In fig. 18 is reproduced a sketch of a hollow tree trunk from Arran, probably a Lepidodendron stem, in which only the outer portion of the bark has been preserved, while the inner cortical tissues have been removed and the space occupied by volcanic detritus.

Fig. 18. Diagrammatic sketch of a slab cut from a fossil stem (Lepidodendron?) from Laggan Bay. e, Imperfectly preserved bark of a large stem, extending in patches round the periphery of the specimen; the oval and circular bodies in the interior are the xylem portions of the central cylinders of Lepidodendron stems, x1, primary wood, x2, secondary wood. From a specimen in the Binney collection, Woodwardian Museum, Cambridge. ⅕ nat. size.

The smaller cylindrical structures in the interior of the hollow trunk are the central woody cylinders of Lepidodendroid trees; each consists of an axial pith surrounded by a band of primary wood and a broader zone of secondary wood. One of the axes probably belonged to the stem of which only the shell has been preserved, the others must have come from other trees and may have been floated in by water[128]. The microscopic details of the wood and outer cortex have in this instance been preserved in a calcareous material, which was no doubt derived by water percolating through the volcanic ash. It is frequently found that in fossil trees or twigs a separation of the tissues has taken place along such natural lines of weakness as the cambium or the phellogen, before the petrifying medium had time to permeate the entire structure. Tree stems recently killed by lava streams during volcanic eruptions at the present day supply a parallel with the Palaeozoic forest trees of Carboniferous times.

Guillemard in describing a volcanic crater in Celebes, speaks of burnt trees still standing in the lava stream, “so charred at the base of the trunk that we could easily push them down[129].” An interesting case is quoted by Hooker in his Himalayan Journals, illustrating the occurrence of a hollow shell of a tree, in which the outer portions of a stem had been left while the inner portions had disappeared, the wood being hollow and so favourable to the production of a current of air which accelerated the destruction of the internal tissues.

On the coast near Burntisland on the Firth of Forth blocks of rock are met with in which numerous plant fragments of Carboniferous age are scattered in a confused mass through a calcareous volcanic matrix. The twigs, leaves, spores, and other portions are in small fragments, and their delicate cells are often preserved in wonderful perfection.

CONDITIONS OF PRESERVATION.

The manner of occurrence of plants in sandstones, shales or other rocks is often of considerable importance to the botanist and geologist, as an aid to the correct interpretation of the actual conditions which obtained at the time when the plant remains were accumulating in beds of sediment. To attempt to restore the conditions under which any set of plants became preserved, we have to carefully consider each special case. A nest of seeds preserved as internal casts in a mass of sandstone, such as is represented by the block of Carboniferous sandstone in fig. 19, suggests a quiet spot in an eddy where seeds were deposited in the sandy sediment. Delicate leaf structures with sporangia still intact, point to quietly flowing water and a transport of no great distance. Occasionally the large number of delicate and light plant fragments, associated it may be with insect wings, may favour the idea of a wind storm which swept along the lighter pieces from a forest-clad slope and deposited them in the water of a lake. In some Tertiary plant-beds the manner of occurrence of leaves and flowers is such as to suggest a seasonal alternation, and the different layers of plant débris may be correlated with definite seasons of growth[130].

Fig. 19. Piece of Coal-Measures Sandstone with casts of Trigonocarpon seeds, from Peel Quarry near Wigan. From a specimen in the Manchester Museum, Owens College. ½ nat. size.