2016
DOI: 10.1111/gbi.12180
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Microbe‐like inclusions in tree resins and implications for the fossil record of protists in amber

Abstract: During the past two decades, a plethora of fossil micro-organisms have been described from various Triassic to Miocene ambers. However, in addition to entrapped microbes, ambers commonly contain microscopic inclusions that sometimes resemble amoebae, ciliates, microfungi, and unicellular algae in size and shape, but do not provide further diagnostic features thereof. For a better assessment of the actual fossil record of unicellular eukaryotes in amber, we studied equivalent inclusions in modern resin of the A… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Early to mid-Paleocene (~66-62 Ma) amber has been recovered from the Department of Primary Industries (DPI) Core Lab in small amounts (N = 6) in 2013-2015 from drill cores in the Gippsland Basin of southern Victoria, Australia, in the petroleum well Barracouta-1 (spudded in December 1964; originally named the Gippsland Shelf-1 well) at 1967.9 m depth. This record is represented by translucent to semi-opaque orange and red amber devoid of inclusions to date, apart from particulate debris and pseudoinclusions 29 . This Paleocene amber from the lower Lygistepollenites balmeii spore-pollen Zone was deposited in sediments of the mid-Cretaceous to Eocene Latrobe Group, which mostly comprises fluvial, floodplain and coastal plain siliciclastics interspersed with thin coal beds 30 .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Early to mid-Paleocene (~66-62 Ma) amber has been recovered from the Department of Primary Industries (DPI) Core Lab in small amounts (N = 6) in 2013-2015 from drill cores in the Gippsland Basin of southern Victoria, Australia, in the petroleum well Barracouta-1 (spudded in December 1964; originally named the Gippsland Shelf-1 well) at 1967.9 m depth. This record is represented by translucent to semi-opaque orange and red amber devoid of inclusions to date, apart from particulate debris and pseudoinclusions 29 . This Paleocene amber from the lower Lygistepollenites balmeii spore-pollen Zone was deposited in sediments of the mid-Cretaceous to Eocene Latrobe Group, which mostly comprises fluvial, floodplain and coastal plain siliciclastics interspersed with thin coal beds 30 .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The Tuna-1 amber is represented by a dominance of mostly transparent with rare semi-opaque orange and rare red amber that ranges from lenticular, angular, wedge-shaped, and irregularly shaped pieces. Possible filamentous inclusions have been noted in amber pieces obtained at 2668.1 m depth; otherwise, only minor amounts of pyrite, pseudoinclusions sensu Thiel et al 29 and particulate debris have been noted in the amber. The lowermost levels containing amber at 2673.1 m is characterized by siltstone with dispersed organic matter, which is overlain by sandy siltstone with coalified wood fragments, massive siltstones with coal laminations and organic matter, and capped by partially sideratized siltstone with poorly developed laminations and minor bioturbation.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…1I in Thiel et al . 36 ). The recent report of a structure in Burmese amber, interpreted as a dictyostelioid slime mold 37 is likewise unconvincing.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%