[140] See Prof. Williamson's Memoir on Sternbergia, Manchester Philos. Trans. 1851.
[141] Ibid. p. 355.
Petrified Forests of Conifers.—The most remarkable assemblage of fossil conifers is that presented in the well-known quarries in the Island of Portland, to which allusion was made when describing the Mantelliæ obtained from that locality (ante, [p. 157].). Referring to Wond. p. 385,[142] for an account of the geological circumstances under which the phenomena occur, it will suffice to state that a forest of pines appears to have been submerged, and the trunks to have become petrified, whilst standing erect on the spot where they grew; the Cycads still shoot up as it were between the stems, and the roots of the trees, though changed into flint, extend into the bed of mould whence they originally derived support, and which is so little altered in appearance, as to be called the Dirt-bed, by the quarrymen; thus realizing the fable of the petrified city in Arabian story, whose inhabitants were turned into stone, in the varied attitudes of life.
[142] Geol. I. of Wight, p. 394. Petrifactions, p. 56.
No foliage has been observed in connexion with these trees; not a leaf has been found in the rocks: a cone, nearly related to the fruit of Araucaria excelsa, was discovered in the Dirt-bed.
At Brook-point, in the Isle of Wight, an equally interesting fact may be observed. At the base of the cliff, which is entirely composed of Wealden clays, shales, and sandstones, there is a vast accumulation of petrified firs and pines, imbedded in the indurated grit that forms the lowermost strata on the sea-shore, and of which the reefs and rocks, produced by the encroachments of the sea, and that extend far from land, are composed. These can be examined at low-water, and the observer, upon lifting up the fuci and algæ which cover them, will find the rocks and masses of stone to consist of petrified trunks of coniferæ. There are no erect trees as in Portland; on the contrary, the stems are prostrate, and lie confusedly intermingled, and associated with bones of Iguanodons and other reptiles, and large mussel-shells; the whole presenting the characters of a raft of forest trees which had drifted down the stream of a vast river, and entangled in its course the limbs and carcasses of animals that were floating in the water, and the shells that inhabited the river, and at length became submerged in the bed of the delta or estuary. Both foliage and fruit have been found in the Wealden deposits at Brook, and will be described hereafter.[143]
[143] See Geol. I. of Wight, chap. x. and xi.
In the sands of the Desert of Sahara, in Egypt,—among the mammalian bones of the Sub-Himalayas,—and in the tertiary deposits of Virginia associated with cycads,—drifted trunks of conifers have been discovered.
Fossil trees of this family also occur in various localities in Australia and Van Diemen's Land, the wood of which is in some parts calcified, and in others silicified. The same trunk often has externally a white friable calcareous zone, several inches thick, traversed by veins of silex, or opaline chalcedony, while the centre is a silicified mass; in both states the internal structure may be detected. This kind of fossil wood is to be seen in most cabinets, a large quantity having been sent to England by emigrants.[144] These fossil trees appear to have been subjected to the same mutations as those of the Isle of Portland, for they are described as standing erect to the height of several feet in a bed of arid sand, apparently in the places where they grew; their petrified branches being scattered around them. They so entirely preserve their natural appearance, that one of the colonists mentions among the extraordinary sights he witnessed on his first arrival in New Holland, the burning of trees into lime to manure the ground.
[144] My late friend, Sir Francis Chantrey, had a magnificent specimen, which, is now in the British Museum. See Petrifactions, p, 59.