[155] Tab. Veg. Foss. p. 64.
Fossil Resins.—Amber.—The resinous secretions of Conifers are occasionally found in a fossil state. When the tunnel was carried through Highgate Hill, in 1811, concretionary lumps of a brittle substance were discovered, which proved, upon analysis, to be the resin of a coniferous tree changed by mineralization. In a bed of fossil wood, near Hythe, in Kent, a resin was found that partook of the properties of amber and retinasphalt; it was of a clear red colour, very infusible, and acted upon with difficulty by many chemical solvents.[156]
[156] Geological Proceedings, 1843.
The pollen of pines or firs occurs in a tertiary deposit at Egra, in Bohemia; this bed is entirely composed of pollen and the frustules of many kinds of diatomaceæ.[157]
[157] Described by M. Ehrenberg.
AMBER. FOSSIL PALMS.
Amber, so remarkable for its electrical properties, and so largely used for ornamental purposes, is a fossil resin, the product of an extinct species of pine (Pinus succinifer), which, though nearly allied to Pinus abies, and P. picea, is essentially distinct. The Amber in the European markets is principally collected from the shores of the Baltic, between Memel and Konigsberg, being washed out of submerged beds of lignite, and thrown up on the strand by the waves. Amber is occasionally found on the eastern and northern shores of England. The forests of Amber-pines appear to have been situated in the south-eastern part of what is now the bed of the Baltic, in about 55° north latitude, and 37° to 38° east longitude, and were probably destroyed at the commencement of the Drift period.
Insects, spiders, small crustaceans, leaves, and fragments of vegetable tissue, are often imbedded in amber; and a few hairs and feathers of mammalia and birds have been detected. These organic bodies must have become immersed in this substance when it exuded from the trees in a viscid state, for they are often preserved as fresh and beautiful as if recently embalmed in the liquid resin. Upwards of 800 species of insects have been discovered, chiefly referable to Aptera, Diptera, Neuroptera, Coleoptera, Libellula, &c.: by far the greater number belong to extinct forms.
The vegetable remains comprise four species of pine, and species of cedar, cypress, juniper, yew; and of oak, poplar, beech, ash, &c.; and a few ferns, mosses, liverworts, confervæ, and fungi. The Amber appears to have exuded from the bark and wood, but chiefly from the root-stock, as is the case with the Copal and Animé, which are resinous substances obtained from certain trees in India and America, and largely employed for varnish: these resins are often substituted for true amber, especially when they contain insects, &c.; but the latter are always of the existing indigenous species of the country. The difference observable in the colour of the various species of amber, is attributable to accidental chemical admixtures.[158]
[158] Petrifactions, p. 23.