Fossil Woods From Bozovici (Sw Romania)
Author
Iamandei, Stanila
Geological Institute of Romania - 1 st, Caransebeş street, Bucharest, Ro- 012271, Romania
iamandei@gmail.com
Author
Iamandei, Eugenia
Geological Institute of Romania - 1 st, Caransebeş street, Bucharest, Ro- 012271, Romania; * Corresponding author: iamandei @ gmail. com
iamandei@gmail.com
Author
Stoia, Tiberiu
Bocșa Română, Caraș-Severin county, Romania; tibi. stoia @ gmail. com
tibi.stoia@gmail.com
text
Acta Palaeontologica Romaniae
2020
2019-10-25
16
1
3
17
http://dx.doi.org/10.35463/j.apr.2020.01.01
journal article
10.35463/j.apr.2020.01.01
1842-371x
10520698
Spiroplatanoxylon densiradiatum
(Petrescu)
Süss, 2007
Fig. 6
, a-i.
Fig. 6 a-i.
(graphic scale, μm).
Spiroplatanoxylon densiradiatum
(Petrescu)
Süss 2007
, Bozovici, Romania.
a-c
. (cross section) – distinct boundary of growth ring, diffuse-porous wood structure, ray dilatations at boundaries.
d-f
. Tangential section – two-sized rays - fine and multiseriate (
d
), spiral thickenings on vessels (
f
).
g-i
. Radial section – badly preserved scalariform perforation plates (
h
), round simple pits in cross fields.
Macroscopic description
A
decimetric sized sample of petrified trunk (
Fig. 3
), displaying whitish color, fibrous texture and regular growth rings, was submitted to palaeoxylotomical study. From it, thin sections standard oriented were realized and a microscopic study was performed on them. The studied material originates in Bozovici depression, coming from mid-Badenian sediments (upper part of Valea Slătinicului Member of Lăpușnicul Mare Formation), and is deposited in the National Geological Museum Collection (
NGM
Col.,
Bucharest
) under the number 27,622.
Microscopical description
The growth rings are clearly distinct and the wood structure is diffuse-porous to semi-ring-porous. The multiseriate rays present typical dilatations at ring boundaries.
The vessels in cross section seen appear as solitary pores or as tangential pairs or diagonal or in clusters. Thay have angular section, slightly rounded or even deformed, and have moderately thick walls, of 7-10 μm the double wall. The woody fascicles, may have tangentially, between two rays, 1-6 vessels. In the early-wood the vessels are meansized, their diameters ratio (r/tg) is of 40-95/30-63 μm. Their relatively uniform size is gradually diminishing, in the late-wood, to (20)30-40/(15)20-30 μm, so defining a diffuse-porous wood, tending to semi-ring-porous. The density of the vessels is 115–130 per square mm. In radial section, scalariform perforations can be seen, on tilted plates, with 18-24 thin bars, quite poorly preserved. The walls of the vessels present bordered pits, opposite, horizontaly elongated, to scalariform by apertures' coalescence, and are rather badly preserved. Helical thickenings are also present, visible especially in tangential section. The length of vessels elements is difficult to measure. No tyloses were observed inside the vessels. Sometimes clusters of vascular tracheids appear, with similar pits, like on vessels.
The wood parenchyma apears in cross section of apotracheal
type
, diffuse, and appear scattered cells among the fibres, or as uniseriate short lines. In longitudinal view appear as strands of rectangular parenchyma cells, empty or with crystals inside, probably with simple pits on walls, quite poorly preserved. Vessels’ elements length is difficult to measure.
The rays, in cross section appear two sized, show linear trajectory, and are formed by rectangular cells. The multiseriate rays have typical platanoid dilatations at growth ring boundaries. In tangential view they appear clearly twosized, of 1-4 and 8-12 cells wide, the multiseriate are fusiform and compact, have cell-sheath and are usually tall, having up to 30 cells in height, or more. The body ray cells are slightly polygonal, and unequally sized and relatively thick-walled, and the uniseriate ray-endings have 1-5 slightly polygonal cells. The ray-density is of 7- 12 rays on tangential horizontal mm. In radially view the rays are heterocellular, having procumbent body-cells and marginals square or taller. In cross-fields, poorly preserved glyptostroboid pits appear. Sometimes, secretory cells appear, often bearing crystals.
The fibres are angular in cross section, with rounded lumina and thick walls. Poorly preserved pits on the longitudinal walls were observed.
Affinities and discussions
After evaluating the microscopical features observed in our specimen regarding the diffuse-porous pattern of the pores in cross-section, typical dilated rays at growth-ring boundary ("platanoid dilatations"), typical pitting on vessels and on vascular tracheids and scalariform perforations and, also, the presence of helical thickenings, even poorly preserved, we found some generic similitudes with the platanaceous structure (
Greguss, 1969
).
There are three fossil genera created for platanaceous fossil woods:
Plataninium
,
Platanoxylon
and
Spiroplatanoxylon
.
The genus
Plataninium
has a long history: it was created in 1842 by Unger (published in
Endlicher, 1842
) as a "pocket taxon" for platanoid broad-rayed fossil wood, not illustrated but with a very comprising diagnosis based on the type-species
P. acerinum
Unger
, described on a fossil wood coming from an unknown horizon and locality (see
Crawley, 1989
). It was emended by
Vater (1884)
, unifying the diagnoses of
Phegonium
(
or
Fegonium
) Unger, and
Plataninium
Unger. It
was emended again by
Felix (1894)
and, later, by
Page (1968)
, in order to comprise members of the families
Fagaceae
(Fagus
type
),
Platanaceae
(
Platanus
type
),
Eupteleaceae
(
Euptelea
type
) and
Icacinaceae
(
Citronella, Ottoschultzia
types
), for specimens difficult to be assigned. After few times its diagnosis was emended again by
Brett (1972)
who admitted it as morphogenus, attributing to it four species:
Plataninium decipiens
Brett, 1972
;
P. europeanum
Prakash, Březinova et Bůžek, 1971
;
P. haydenii
Felix, 1896
;
P. brettii
Crawley, 1989
. Some years later,
Süss and Müller-Stoll (1977)
consider
Plataninium
an inutile, ambiguous name that has to be invalidated.
Therefore, this name was several times subject of revision or dispute, some species being redescribed as belonging to other genera, for exemple:
Plataninium subaffine
Vater, 1884
, that became
Hedycaryoxylon subaffine
(Vater)
Süss, 1960
; or
Plataninium aceroides
(Goeppert)
Windisch, 1886
, that became
Fagoxylon acerinum
(Windisch)
Süss, 1986
; or have been replaced by names as
Platanus
,
Platanoxylon
or
Spiroplatanoxylon
(see
Edwards and Jogmans, 1931
;
Süss, 1960
,
1971
,
1986
,
2007
;
Süss and Müller-Stoll, 1977
).
The name
Plataninium
is still used by some American, Asian and even European scientists, and considered as a primitive
type
. This supports the Bayley concept regarding the evolution of the xylotomic features (see
Süss, 1960
) from
Plataninium
, which has scalariform perforations, spiral thickenings, marked heterocellular rays, to
Platanoxylon
, as an evolved
type
, which has simple perforations, no spiral thickenings and homocellular rays (
Selmeier, 1996
). Anyway, now
Plataninium
is usually described from sites with platanoid leaves from Cretaceous to Eocene of North America, Paleogene from
Japan
and even Upper Cenozoic in Europe (see
Taylor & Taylor, 1993
). We cite here some species described in the last decades under the genus name
Plataninium
Unger
(in Endlicher) emend.
Vater, 1884
:
-
P. obbruxellense
Stockmans, 1936
, described from the Eocene of
Belgium
. Specimens from Apuseni Mountains described as
Platanoxylon
cf.
obbruxelense
(Stockmans)
Petrescu, 1969
and by
Petrescu and Lazăr (1970)
as having a slightly disordered structure, small pores, scalariform perforation plates and relatively thin rays.
-
P. californicum
Page, 1968
and
P. platanoides
Page, 1968
described from Cretaceous deposits of
California
.
-
P. decipiens
Brett, 1972
, is also described by
Crawley (1989)
, and by
Poole
et al. (2002)
from similar Paleogene deposits (Eocene London Clay) of south-east
England
, and by
Meijer (2000)
from the Late Cretaceous of
Belgium
.
-
P. brettii
Crawley, 1989
, is described on a badly preserved specimen, from Paleocene of
Great Britain
- Inner
Hebrides
.
-
P. piercei
Wheeler, McClammer et LaPasha, 1995
, described from deposits of terminal Cretaceous to Paleocene of San Juan Basin,
New Mexico
, North America.
-
P. jezoensis
Takahashi et Suzuki, 2003
and
P. ogasawarae
Takahashi et Suzuki, 2003
, described from Cretaceus of
Japan
.
The morphogenus
Platanoxylon
Andreánszky, 1951
(ex
Prakash et al. 1971
) was also subject of revision and dispute, at least in the last time (
Süss & Müller-Stoll, 1977
;
Süss, 2007
, with references). After all these, a clear diagnosis has to separate the three admitted genera of fossil plants. Hence, after the revision of
Süss (2007)
, some already described species were assigned to this morphogenus (
Selmeier, 1996
considered it as organ-genus!) as it follows:
-
Plataninium haydenii
Felix, 1894
,
P. pacificum
Platen, 1908
and
P. crystallophilum
Platen, 1908
were revised to
Platanoxylon haydenii
(Felix)
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
,
Platanoxylon pacificum
(Platen)
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
, and respectively to
Platanoxylon crystallo-philum
(Platen)
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
.
- Moreover, six species were validated by
Süss et Müller-Stoll (1977)
as correctly attributed to
Platanoxylon
:
P. andreanszkyi
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
,
P. hungaricum
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
,
P. palibacsii
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
,
P. sarmaticum
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
,
P
. catenatum
Süss et Müller-Stoll, 1977
, also described by us in the South Apuseni Mountains (Iamandei & Iamandei, 2000), and
P. cohenii
(Schuster)
Süss, 1980
, adding other generic identification as
Platanoxylon
sp.
, described from
Hungary
,
Czech Republic
and
Germany
by Andreánszky (1952), as belonging to
Platanoxylon
, according to
Selmeier (1996
,
2001
) and
Gottwald (2000)
. Also, the specimen described by
Petrescu & Vasiliu (1987)
from
Romania
is a
Platanoxylon
.
After a special interest accorded to this
type
of fossil wood by
Süss (2007
, with references), a new taxon was created, „aus dem Tertiär von Europa und Vorderasie“,
Spiroplatanoxylon
Süss 2007
, which is characterized, beside the plane-like wood structure, by two aspects considered more primitive, but characteristic to the genus: the scalariform perforation plates and the helical thickenings on vessels. The type-species was chosen
Plataninium porosum
Felix, 1887
- which was redescribed and transferred to
Spiroplatanoxylon porosum
(Felix)
Süss, 2007
as comb. nova, and two new species of
Spiroplatanoxylon
were described:
-
S. gregussii
Süss, 2007
, which has bigger vessels, mostly solitary and less frequent per square mm, very abundant tyloses, broad multiseriate rays and crystals in the axial parenchyma present as chambered cells or, rarely, as idioblasts.
-
S. mueller-stollii
Süss, 2007
, quite similar, with mostly solitary vessels, less frequent per square mm, very abundant tyloses, generally thinner rays, which can even be aggregated and also broad multiseriate rays and crystals in the axial parenchyma present as chambered cells or, rarely, as idioblasts; the same species was identified by
Továrková et al. (2011)
from Brno area, Czech Rep.
Also, several species of
Icacinoxylon
,
Platanoxylon
and
Plataninium
are reidentified and placed into the genus
Spiroplatanoxylon
. It is very of note that even
Page (1968)
also emended once the genus
Plataninium
, to comprise broader-rayed structures, including members of the
Icacinaceae
(equivalents of
Citronella, Ottoschultzia
). -
Plataninium europeanum
Prakash, Březinová et Bůžek, 1971
found in northern
Bohemia
, was revised by
Süss (2007)
to
Spiroplatanoxylon europeanum
(Prakash, Březinová and Bůžek) Süss
, having smaller vessels with scalariform perforated plates, spiral thickenings, crystals and low vessel frequency.
-
Plataninium porosum
Felix, 1887
, found in Apuseni Mountains, at Almaşu Mare, was revised to
Spiroplatanoxylon porosum
(Felix)
Süss, 2007
, having spiral thickenings on vessels and long chains of crystalliferous parenchyma. The same species of
Plataninium
was described also by
Petrescu and Nuţu (1970)
, from Boiu, South Apuseni Mountains, so it becomes
Spiroplatanoxylon porosum
(Felix)
Süss, 2007
too.
-
Platanoxylon bohemicum
Prakash, Brezinova and Buzek, 1971
was revised to
S. bohemicum
(Prakash, Březinová and Bůžek)
Süss, 2007
, having high scalariform perforation plates, abundant tyloses and shorter rays. However, more recently,
Sakala et al. (2010)
revisiting the original site from where
Prakash et al. (1971)
have described
Platanoxylon bohemicum
,
Plataninium europeanum
and
Dryoxylon bohemicum
, have made microscopical observations on new slides and confirmed the presence of spiral thickenings and rare prismatic crystals in axial parenchyma cells in
Plataninium
but not in
Platanoxylon
. So, they decided to use the denomination
Spiroplatanoxylon
only for the
Plataninium
type
of wood in which are observed spiral thickening and crystals. As a precaution, they kept the three morphospecies as separate units, even if they thought they all may represent the same botanical species. Also, it is of interest that
Greguss (1967
,
1969
) have described some specimens as
Icacinoxylon
sp.
seu
Platanoxylon
sp.
, or
Icacinoxylon
/
Platanoxylon
(see also
Gryc & Sakala, 2010
). In fact, 18 badly preserved specimens studied by
Greguss (1967)
, were identified as
Icacinoxylon
sp.
seu
Platanoxylon
sp.
, having scalariform perforation plates, with 6-10, 18-20, or 30-35 bars, crystals inside vessels, parenchyma or rays, sometimes radial or axial canals, or typical platanoid aspect, and were, or must be attributed to
Spiroplatanoxylon
sp.
:
- Andreánszky (1951) described
Platanoxylon
sp.
with helical thickenings on vessels and scalariform perforations that could be
Spiroplatanoxylon
sp.
(
Süss, 2007
).
-
S. citronelloides
(Shilkina)
Süss, 2007
, was described by
Shilkina (1956)
as a species of
Icacinoxylon
, and then, was found again and described by
Greguss (1967)
as having vessels high scalariform perforation plates with numerous bars (30–50), spiral thickenings abundant tyloses and shorter rays.
-
Spiroplatanoxylon hortobagyii
(Greguss)
Süss, 2007
, (former
Icacinoxylon
) has oval vessels in cross-section, and shorter rays, beside the generic features.
-
Spiroplatanoxylon shilkinae
(Greguss)
Süss, 2007
, (former
Icacinoxylon
) has vessels with high scalariform perforation plates with numerous bars, and lower rays (to 8 cells broad), which can even be aggregated.
-
Spiroplatanoxylon platanoides
(Greguss)
Süss, 2007
, (former
Icacinoxylon
) has heterocellular rays with several rows of upright marginal cells. The species of Greguss was also described from the Apuseni Mountains by
Petrescu (1978)
even if on badly preserved specimens.
-
Spiroplatanoxylon densiradiatum
(Petrescu)
Süss, 2007
, (former
Icacinoxylon
) has smaller angular vessels, solitary or in clusters, 75 per square mm., and scalariform perforation plates with 20-35 bars, spiral thickenings, two-sized rays with high ray-frequency and ray-cells with crystals.
-
Spiroplatanoxylon densiporosum
(Petrescu)
Süss, 2007
, (former
Icacinoxylon
) has small and numerous vessels that show scalariform perforation plates with more numerous bars and spiral thickenings, long chains of crystalliferous parenchyma, high rays and terminal fibrous band.
-
Spiroplatanoxylon romanicum
(Petrescu)
Süss, 2007
, (former
Icacinoxylon
) have rather numerous vessels (50- 70 per square mm) with high scalariform perforation plates with numerous bars (up to 30-35), spiral thickenings, secretory parenchyma cells, rays of 11-16 cells broad and very high.
Also, there are other described European species of
Icacinoxylon
that must be translated to
Spiroplatanoxylon
:
-
Icacinoxylon crystallophorum
Greguss, 1967
a
species having high scalariform perforation plates, up to 55 bars and broad compact rays of 20 cells wide, found also by
Petrescu (1978)
and by
Iamandei and Iamandei (1997)
in the Apuseni Mountains, and must also be assigned to
Spiroplatanoxylon cystallophorum
(Greguss) Iamandei
, comb. nova.
-
Icacinoxylon sylvaticum
(Tuzson)
Greguss, 1969
, and
I
.
aff.
sylvaticum
(Tuzson)
Greguss, 1969
, described from
Hungary
and found again by
Dupéron (1978)
from the Stampien of Agenais,
France
, must become
Spiroplatanoxylon sylvaticum
(Tuzson) Iamandei
, comb. nova, and respectively
Spiroplatanoxylon
aff.
sylvaticum
(Tuzson) Iamandei
, comb. nova.
Discussing the attribution of a French wood
to
Icacinoxylon
aff.
sylvaticum
(Tuzson)
Greguss, 1969
, Duperon (1976) wrote: "la seul espèce actuelle présentant des eléments de vaisseaux spiralés est
Citronella mucronata
, et la plupart des bois décrits sous le nom d'
Icacinoxylon
possèdent des éléments de vaisseaux spiralés. Faut-il en conclure d'emblée que l'évolution de la famille tend vers la disparition de cet ornement? Il serait bien hardi de l'affirmer. Cependant,
Metcalfe and Chalk (1950)
constatent que les bois à perforations de vaisseaux scalariformes ont plus fréquemment des spirales que les bois à perforations de vaisseaux simples et à structures étagées. Les perforations scalariformes étant un caractère d'autant plus primitif que le nombre de barres est élevé, on est tenté de penser que la plupart des bois fossiles d'Icacinaceae sont à caractères plutot archaïques".
- Another species of
Icacinoxylon
described from
Georgia
as
I. goderdzicum
Shilkina, 1958
, has to be translated to
Spiroplatanoxylon goderdzicum
(Shilkina) Iamandei
, comb. nova.
Some fossil woods described from the Romanian Carpathians and identified as
Icacinoxylon
both at species and genus level, must be discussed and correctly assigned to the valid accepted genus:
-
Icacinoxylon tyleradiatum
Iamandei et Iamandei, 1997
, described from the latest Cretaceous deposits of Apuseni Mountains, having vessels with scalariform perforation plates with numerous bars, 20 or more, tyloses, spiral thickenings on vascular tracheids, or on small vessels, secretory parenchyma cells with dark content, two-sized rays, fine of 2-3 and broad of 12-16, dissected, high heterogeneous and heterocellular, 1-5 marginal square, or upright ray-cells, with gum and crystals inside, must become
Spiroplatanoxylon tyleradiatum
(Iamandei et Iamandei) Iamandei
, comb. nova.
-
Icacinoxylon grambastfessardi
Petrescu, 1972
(in
Petrescu & Dragastan, 1972
) from the Oligocene of Telega (
Prahova county
) must be redescribed as
S
piroplatanoxylon
grambastfessardi
(Petrescu) Iamandei
, comb. nova, even if no spiral thickenings were observed, but high scalariform perforation plates, with up to 25 bars, and twosized rays 1-4 seriate and fusiform, of up 16-20 cells broad, ray-cells with crystals.
- Numerous other specimens identified as
Icacinoxylon
sp.
, described from the late Miocene of Prăvăleni (
Petrescu & Nuţu, 1971
, 1972), from the Oligocene from NW Transilvania (
Petrescu, 1978
) and from the Oligocene of Carpathians’ Curvature (
Petrescu et al., 1989
) on specimens quite badly preserved, having semi-ring-porous wood, often diffuse, not too large solitary vessels or grouped in 2-3, with scalariform perforations, two-sized rays, fine of 1-4 cells wide and of 6-(10-12)-18 cells broad, either compact or aggregate, or dissected, heterogeneous with polygonal ray-cells, unequally sized and with crystals and few other details. They have obvious platanoid wood structure, and must be also assigned to
Spiroplatanoxylon
, as valid taxon.
Since the wood structure of the studied specimen from Bozovici resembles to many described specimens of
Spiroplatanoxylon
, especially to the forms described by
Petrescu & Dragastan, 1972
) from the Oligocene of Telega and also by
Petrescu and Nuţu (1972)
from Prăvăleni, we tried to find very specific details to discriminate between them and we found a close identity with the species
Spiroplatanoxylon densiradiatum
(Petrescu)
Süss, 2007
, by having diffuse-porous to semi-ring porous distribution of the polygonal and not to large vessels (under 100 μm in diameter), numerous two-sized rays, with platanoid dilation at ring boundary in cross-section, and scalariform perforations with 18-24-35 thin bars, with bordered pits, opposite, horizontally elongate to scalariform, with helical thickenings, with crystals in parenchyma, two-sized rays of 1-4 and 8-12 cells wide, high, fusiform, compact heterocellular, ray-cells with crystals, thick-walled fibres - angular in cross section. In these conditions, we assign our studied specimen to the species
Spiroplatanoxylon densiradiatum
(Petrescu)
Süss, 2007
.