Sigillarlæ and Stigmariæ.
SIGILLARLÆ AND STIGMARIÆ.
Among the most common and striking objects that arrest the attention of a person who visits a coal-mine for the first time, and examines the numerous vegetable relics that are profusely dispersed among the heaps of slate, coal, and shale, are long flat slabs, from half an inch to an inch thick, having both surfaces longitudinally fluted, and uniformly pitted with deep symmetrical imprints; these are disposed with such perfect regularity between the grooves, that the specimens are often supposed, by persons not conversant with palæontology, to be engraven stones, and not natural productions. These fossils are the flattened trunks of gigantic trees covered by the bark in the state of coal; the regular imprints on the surface, being the scars left by the separation of the petioles or leaf-stalks, as in the arborescent ferns previously examined. The name Sigillaria, commonly applied to these fossils, is derived from sigillum, a seal, and alludes to the regular and uniform pattern of the imprints on the surface. These stems are from a few inches to several feet in diameter, and the largest attain a height of sixty feet; they are generally found lying in a horizontal position in the strata, and quite flat, from the pressure produced by the superincumbent rocks; but when the trunks are in an erect position, and at right angles to the plane of the beds, the cylindrical form of the original is preserved.
A remarkable instance, in which five stems of Sigillaria were standing upright, with their roots in the soil below, apparently in the position in which they grew, was brought to light a few years since, in forming the Bolton and Manchester railway.[94] They stand on the same plane, and near to each other. Their roots are branched, and spread out in the bed of impure coal in which they are implanted. The trunks are surrounded by a soft blue shale. The largest tree is eleven feet high, and seven and a half feet in circumference at the base; its trunk is gnarled and knotted, and has many decorticated prominences, like those in barked timber of our old dicotyledonous trees; the roots, too, partake of the same character.[95] The others are respectively from three to five feet in height. A sketch of one of the short stems is subjoined. All the trees were broken off as if by violence, and no traces of the upper part of the stems or branches were detected.
[94] These trees still remain in situ, and, thanks to the scientific zeal of Mr. Hawkshaw, have been carefully preserved. They are situated at Dixon Fold, Clifton, near Manchester. Instructive models of these highly interesting relics of the carboniferous forests may be obtained.
An excellent Memoir on this discovery, with illustrations, by Mr. Hawkshaw, is given in Geol. Trans, vol. vi. pl. xvii. See Pict. Atlas, p. 198; and Petrifactions, p. 36.
[95] See Mr. Bowman's Memoir, Geol. Proc. vol. iii. p. 270.
Lign. 32. Base of a Trunk of a Sigillaria. with roots,
standing erect with five other stems, in Carboniferous strata.
(The original is four feet high.)