Evidence of wildfire based on microscopic charcoal, spores and pollen grains from Early Cretaceous sediments of South Rewa and Kachchh basins, India

Authors

  • Madhav Kumar Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences, 53 University Road, Lucknow 226007, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54991/jop.2018.55

Keywords:

Palynoflora, Microscopic charcoal, Wildfire, Bansa and Bhuj formations, Early Cretaceous, India

Abstract

Early Cretaceous sedimentary successions in South Rewa and Kachchh basins of India comprising well–preserved macro–and microscopic biota, are considered to be significant late Gondwanan Lagerstätte of this epoch. Several sedimentary successions of the Bansa Formation in South Rewa and Bhuj Formation in Kachchh basins also contain abundant charcoalified plant fragments and thermally altered spores and pollen grains, indicating effect of fire on the vegetation during the deposition of sediments. Light and scanning electron microscopic images of the fire affected plant remains exhibiting less to severe morphologic distortions, viz. rupturing, shrinkage, curling and perforations due to stress and weight loss. The changes observed in their colour from pale yellow to brown, dark brown and black are most conspicuous and primarily related to the high temperature effect before their burial in the sediments. Botanical affinity of these thermally altered and unaltered spores, pollen grains, charcoalified and non–charcoalified woody fragments indicates their derivation from the vegetation constituted mainly by Pinales, Cycadales, Bennettitales, Ginkgoales, tree ferns and other herbaceous pteridophytes. Record of the charcoalified plant fossils from various sedimentary successions of both the basins provides evidence of the wildfire phenomenon during the Late Gondwanic regimes in India.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Abbink OA, Van Konijnenburg–Van–Cittert JHA & Visscher H 2004. A sporomorph eco–group model for the Northwest European Jurassic– Lower Cretaceous: concepts and framework. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 83(1): 17–38.

Alvin KL, Fraser CJ & Spicer RA 1981, Anatomy and palaeoecology of Pseudofrenelopsis and associated conifers in the English Wealden. Palaeontology 24: 759–778.

Ascough PL, Bird MI, Francis SM, Thornton B, Midwood AJ, Scott AC & Apperley D 2011. Variability in oxidative degradation of charcoal: influence of production conditions and environmental exposures. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75(9): 2361–2378.

Atfy EH, Sallam H, Jasper A & Uhl D 2016. The first evidence of paleo– wildfire from the Campanian (Late Cretaceous) of North Africa. Cretaceous Research 57: 306–310.

Babu PVLP 2006. On the Ancient Deltas of India. Journal of the Geological Society of India 67: 569–674. Balme BE 1995. Fossil in situ spores and pollen grains: An annonated catalogue. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 87: 81–323.

Banerjee J, Jana BN & Maheshwari HK 1984. The fossil flora of Kachchh–II. Mesozoic Megaspores. The Palaeobotanist 33: 190–227.

Batten DJ 1996. Palynofacies and palaeoenvironmental interpretation. In: Jansonius J & McGregor DC (Editors)–Palynology, principles and applications, American Association of Stratigraphic Palynologists Foundation, Dallas Volume 3: 1011–1064.

Batten DJ & Morrison L 1983. Methods of palynological preparation for palaeoenvironmental, source potential and organic maturation studies. Bulletin Petroleum Directorate Stavanger, Norway 2: 35–53.

Belcher CM, Mander L, Rein G, Jervis FX, Haworth M, Hesselbo SP, Glasspoool IJ & McElwain JG 2010. Increased fire activity at the Triassic/ Jurassic boundary in Greenland due to Climate–driven floral change. Nature Geoscience 3: 426–429.

Belcher CM & McElwain JC 2008. Limits for Combustion in low O2 Redefine Palaeoatmospheric Predictions for the Mesozoic. Science 321: 1197–1200.

Bhardwaj DC, Kumar P & Singh HP 1972. Palynostratigraphy of coal deposits in Jabalpur Stage, Upper Gondwana, India. The Palaeobotanist 19(3): 225–247.

Biswas SK 1977. Mesozoic rock stratigraphy of Kachchh. Quarterly Journal of Geological, Mining and Metallurgical Society India 49: 1–152.

Biswas SK 1980. Structure of Kachchh–Kathiawar Region, western India. Proceedings of the 3rd Indian Geological Congress Pune, pp. 255–272.

Biswas SK 1982. Rift basins of western margins of India with special reference to hydrocarbon prospects. Bulletin American Association of Petroleum Geologists 66: 1497–1513.

Biswas SK 1987. Regional tectonic framework, structure, and evolution of the western marginal basins of India. Tectonophysics 135: 307–327.

Biswas SK 1999. A review on the rift basins in India during Gondwana with special reference to western Indian basins and their hydrocarbon prospects. Proceedings of the Indian National Science Academy 65: 261–283. Biswas SK 2002. Sedimentation in a Palaeo–Gulf. In: Biswas SK & Chamyal LS (Editors)–Structure, Tectonics and Mesozoic Stratigraphy of Kachchh: 30–47. Contact Program cum Field Workshop, Organized by Department of Geology, Maharaja Sayajirao University, Baroda.

Bond WJ & Scott AC 2010. Fire and spread of flowering plants in the Cretaceous. New Phytologist 188: 1137–1150.

Bose MN & Banerjee J 1984. The fossil flora of Kachchh–I. Mesozoic Megafossils. The Palaeobotanist 33: 1–189.

Bose MN & Shukh–Dev 1959. A new species of Ptilophyllum from Bansa, South Rewa Gondwana Basin. The Palaeobotanist 6(1): 12–15.

Bose MN & Shukh–Dev 1960. Studies on fossil flora of the Jabalpur Series from the South Rewa Gondwana Basin–1. Cycadopteris, Nipaniophyllum and Ginkgoites. The Palaeobotanist 7(2): 143–154.

Bostick NH 1971. Thermal alteration of clastic organic particles as an indicator of contact and burial metamorphism in sedimentary rocks. Geoscience and Man 3: 83–92.

Brown CA 1960. Palynological techniques. Baton Rouge, Los Angels. Brown SAE, Scott AC, Glasspool IJ & Collinson ME 2012. Cretaceous wildfires and their impact on the earth system. Cretaceous Research 36: 162–190.

Burger D 1980. Palynological studies in Lower Cretaceous of the Surat Basin, Australia. Australian Government Publishing Services Canberra Bulletin 189: 1–211.

Caon L, Vallejo VR, Ritsema CJ & Geissen V 2014. Effects of wildfire on soil nutrients in Mediterranean ecosystems. Earth–Science Reviews 139: 47–58.

Carpenter RJ, Holman AI, Abel A & Grice K 2016. Cretaceous fire in Australia: a review with new geochemical evidence, and relevance to the rise of the angiosperms. Australian Journal of Botany 64(8): 564–578.

Central Ground Water Board 2013. District Groundwater Information Booklet of Umariya District, Madhya Pradesh. Report of North Central Region, pp.1–23.

Clark JS 1988. Particle motion and the theory of stratigraphic charcoal analysis: source area, transport, deposition and sampling. Quaternary Research 30(1): 67–80.

Clark JS & Royall PD 1996. Local and regional sediment charcoal evidence for fire regimes in presettlement north–eastern North America. Journal of Ecology 84(3): 365–382.

Collinson ME, Featherstone C, Cripps JA, Nichols GJ & Scott AC 2000. Charcoal–rich plant debris accumulation in the Lower Cretaceous of the Isle of Wight, England. Acta Palaeobotanica Supplement 2: 93–105.

Combaz A 1964. Les palynofacies. Revue de Micropalaeontology 7: 205–218. Combaz A 1971. Thermal degradation of Sporopollenin and genesis of hydrocarbon. In: Brooks J et al. (Editors)–Sporopollenin. Academic Press, New York, pp. 621–653.

Cordeiro RC, Turcq B, Moreira LS, Rodrigues RAR, Filho FFLS, Martins GS, Santos AB, Barbosa M, da Conceição MCG, Rodrigues RC, Evangelista H , Moreira–Turcq P, Penido YP, Sifeddine A & Seoane JCS 2015. Palaeofires in Amazon: Interplay between land use change and palaeoclimatic events. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 415: 137–151.

Correia M 1971. Diagenesis of Sporopollenin and other comparable organic substances: Application to hydrocarbon research. In: Brooks J et al. (Editors)–Sporopollenin. Academic Press, New York, pp. 569–620.

Das S & Guha D 2000. Detailed mapping, geochemistry and petrology of volcanic and sub–volcanic plugs and associated extrusive and intrusive of Deccan Traps, Kachchh District. Records Geological Survey of India 123: 10–14.

Demaison GJ & Moore GT 1980. Anoxic environment and oil source bed genesis. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 64(8): 1179–1209.

Desai BG & Saklani RD 2015. Palaeocommunity dynamics and behavioral analysis of Conichnus: Bhuj Formation (Lower Cretaceous), Kachchh– India. Ichnos 22: 43–55.

Dettmann ME 1963. Upper Mesozoic microfloras from south–eastern Australia. Proceeding of the Royal Society, Victoria 27: 1–148.

Dettmann ME & Playford G 1969. Palynology of the Australian Cretaceous: A Review. In: Campbell KSW (Editor)–Stratigraphy and Palaeontology: Essays in Honour of Dorothy Hill. Australian National University Press, Canberra, pp.174–210.

dos Santos ACS, Holanda EC, de Souza V, Guerra–Sommer M, Manfroi J & Uhl D 2016. Evidence of palaeo–wildfire from the upper Lower Cretaceous (Serra do Tucano Formation, Aptian–Albian) of Roraima (North Brazil). Cretaceous Research 57: 46–49.

Edward D & Axe L 2004. Anatomical evidences in the Detection of the Earliest Wildfires. Palaios 19(2): 113–128.

Falcon–Lang HJ, Kvaček J & Uličini D 2001. Fire–prone plant communities and palaeoclimate of a Late Cretaceous fluvial to estuarine environment, Pecínov Quarry, Czech Republic. Geological Magazine 138: 553–576.

Falcon–Lang HJ, Wheeler E, Bass P & Herendeen PS 2012. A diverse charcoalified assemblage of Cretaceous (Santonian) angiosperm woods from Upatoi Creek, Georgia, USA. Part 1: Wood types with scalariform perforation plates. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 184: 49–73.

Finkelstein DB, Pratt LM, Curtin TM & Brassell SC 2005. Wildfires and seasonal aridity recorded in Late Cretaceous strata from south–eastern Arizona, USA. Sedimentology 52: 587–599.

Follrich J, Muller U & Gindl W 2006. Effects of thermal modification on the adhesion between spruce wood (Picea abies Karst.) and a thermoplastic polymer.

Holz Roh–Werkst 64: 373–376. Francis JE 1984. The seasonal environment of the Purbeck (Upper Jurassic) fossil forests. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 48: 285–307.

Frey FA, McNaughton NJ, Nelson DR, deLaeter JR & Duncan RA 1996. Petrogenesis of the interaction between Bunbury Basalt, Western Australia: the Kerguelen plume and Gondwana lithosphere? Earth and Planetary Science Letters 144: 163–183.

Frejaville T, Curt T & Carcaillet C 2013. Bark flammability as a fire–response trait for subalpine trees. Frontiers in Plant Sciences 4: 1–8.

Fürsich FT, Oschmann W, Jaitly AK & Singh IB 1991. Faunal response to transgressive–regressive cycles: examples from the Jurassic of western India. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 85: 149–159.

Glasspool IJ, Edwards D & Axe L 2004. Charcoal in the Silurian as evidence of the earliest wildfires. Geology 32: 381–383.

Glasspool IJ, Scott AC, Waltham D, Pronina N & Shao L 2015. The impact of fire on the Late Paleozoic Earth System. Frontiers in Plant Sciences 6: 1–13.

Gray J & Boucot AJ 1975. Colour changes in pollen and spores: A review. Bulletin Geological Society of America 86(7): 1019–1033.

Harris TM 1958. Forest Fire in the Mesozoic. Journal of Ecology 46: 447–453.

Hudspith VA & Belcher CM 2017. Observations of the structural changes that occur during charcoalification: implications for identifying charcoal in the fossil record. Palaeontology 60(4): 503–510.

Jones TP & Chaloner WG 1991. Fossil Charcoal, its recognition and palaeoatmospheric significance. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 97: 39–50.

Jones TP & Lim B 2000. Extra-terrestrial impacts and wildfire. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 164: 57–66.

Karanth RV & Gadhavi MS 2007. Structural intricacies: Emergent thrusts and blind thrusts of central Kachchh, western India. Current Science 83(9): 1271–1280.

Karmalkar NR, Rege S, Griffin WL & ÓReilly S 2005. Alkaline magmatism from Kachchh, NW India: implications for plume–lithosphere interaction. Lithos 81(1–4): 101–119.

Kedves M, Borbola A, Tripathi SKM & Kumar M 2000. Thermal effect on some extant palm pollen. Plant Cell Biology and Development 11: 166–183.

Kedves M & Kincsek I 1989. Effect of the high temperature on the morphological characteristic features of the sporomorphs, I. Acta Biologica Szeged 35: 233–235.

Keeley JE, Pausas JG, Rundel PW, Bond WJ & Bradstock RA 2011. Fire as an evolutionary pressure shaping plant traits. Trends in Plant Sciences 16(8): 406–411.

Korkut DS, Korkut S, Bekar I, Budakçi M, Dilik T & Çakicier N 2008. The effects of heat treatment on the physical properties and surface roughness of Turkish Hazel (Corylus colurna L.) wood. International Journal of Molecular Sciences 9: 1772–1783.

Krishna J 1997. An overview of the Mesozoic stratigraphy of Kachchh and Jaisalmer basins. Journal of the Palaeontological Society of India 32: 136–149.

Küçük Ö & Aktepe N 2017. Effect of phenolic compounds on the flammability in forest fire. International Journal of Engineering Sciences & Research Technology 6(4): 320–321.

Kumar M 2011. Palynofloral and sedimentary organic matter analyses of Early Cretaceous sediments exposed along Sher River in Satpura Basin, Madhya Pradesh, India. Geophytology 41: 9–23.

Kumar M 2018. Palynostratigraphic, palaeoenvironmental and palaeogeographic significance of the Early Cretaceous palynoflora of Kachchh Basin, western India. The Palaeobotanist 67(1): 67–87.

Kumar M & Ram–Awatar 2010. Early to Late Jurassic palynofossils from South Rewa Gondwana Basin, Madhya Pradesh, India. Earth Science Frontiers 17: 215–216, Spl. Issue.

Maheshwari HK 1974. Lower Cretaceous palynomorphs from the Bansa Formation, South Rewa Basin, India. Palaeontographica B 146: 21–55.

Manfroi J, Dutra TL, Gnaedinger S, Uhl D & Jasper A 2015. The first report of a Companion palaeo–wildfire in the West Antarctic Peninsula. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 418: 12–18.

Martill DM, Loveridge RF, Mohr BAR & Simmonds E 2012. A wildfire origin for terrestrial organic debris in the Cretaceous Santana Formation Fossil Lagerstätte (Araripe Basin) of north–east Brazil. Cretaceous Research 34: 135–141.

Masron TC & Pocock SAJ 1981. The classification of plant–derived particulate organic matters in sedimentary rocks. In: Brooks J (Editor)– Organic maturation studies and fossil fuel exploration. Academic Press, London, pp. 145–175.

Mays C, Cantrill DJ & Bevitt JJ 2017. Polar wildfires and conifer serotiny during the Cretaceous global hothouse. Geology 45(12): 1119–1122.

McLoughlin S 1996. Early Cretaceous macrofloras of western Australia. Records of the western Australian Museum 18: 19–65.

McLoughlin S 2001. The breakup history of Gondwana and its impact on pre–Cenozoic floristic provincialism. Australian Journal of Botany 49(3): 271–300.

McParland LC, Collinson ME, Scott AC, Stewart DC, Grassineau NV & Gibbons SJ 2007. Ferns and fire: experimental charring of ferns, compared to wood and implications for palaeobiology, palaeoecology, coal petrology and isotope geochemistry. Palaios 22: 528–538.

Michaletz ST & Johnson EA 2007. How forest fires kill trees: A review of the fundamental biophysical processes. Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research 22(6): 500–515.

Mude SN, Raut SD & Wagh R 2012. Palaeo–environmental significance of ichnofossils from the Bhuj Formation (Gondwana sediments) of the Kachchh Region, Northwestern India. World Journal of Environmental Biosciences 1: 25–29.

Muir RA, Bordy EM & Prevec R 2015. Lower Cretaceous deposit reveals first evidence of a post–wildfire debris flow in the Kirkwood Formation, Algoa Basin, Eastern Cape, South Africa. Cretaceous Research 56: 161–179.

Mukhopadhyay G, Mukhopadhyay SK, Roychowdhury M & Parui P 2010. Stratigraphic correlation between different Gondwana basins of India. Journal of Geological Society India 76: 251–276.

Nealson KH 1997. Sediment Bacteria: Who’s there, what are they doing, and what’s new? Annual Review Earth and Planetary Science 25: 403–434.

Norton IO & Sclater JG 1979. A model for the evolution of the Indian Ocean and the breakup of Gondwanaland. Journal of Geophysical Research 84: 6803–6830.

Pocock SAJ, Vasanthy G & Venkatachala BS 1988. Introduction to the study of particulate organic materials and ecological perspectives. Journal of Palynology 23–24: 167–188.

Pole M & Philippe M 2010. Cretaceous plant fossils of Pitt Island, the Chatham Group, New Zealand. Alcheringa 34: 231–263.

Prakash N 2008. Biodiversity and palaeoclimatic interpretation of Early Cretaceous flora of Jabalpur Formation, Satpura Basin, India. Palaeoworld 17(3–4): 253–263.

Prakash N & Kumar M 2005. Occurrence of Ginkgo Linn. in Early Cretaceous deposits of South Rewa Basin, Madhya Pradesh. Current Science 87: 1512–1515.

Rai J 2006. Discovery of nannofossils in plant bed of the Bhuj Member, Kachchh and its significance. Current Science 91(4): 519–526.

Raja Rao CS 1983. Coal resources of Madhya Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir. Bulletin of Geological Survey India, Series A 45, vol. III: 204 pp.

Rosenberg B, Kemeny G, Switzer RC & Hamilton TC 1971. Quantitative evidence for protein denaturation as the cause of thermal death. Nature 232: 471–473.

Sajjadi F & Playford G 2002a. Systematic and stratigraphy of Late Jurassic– Earliest Cretaceous strata of the Eromanga Basin, Queensland, Australia, Part I. Palaeontographica B 261: 1–97.

Sajjadi F & Playford G 2002b. Systematic and stratigraphy of Late Jurassic– Earliest Cretaceous strata of the Eromanga Basin, Queensland, Australia, Part II. Palaeontographica Abt. B261: 99–165.

Schrank S 2015. Variability and morphology of some pteridophytic spores from the Early Cretaceous (Albian) of the Negev, Israel. Botanica Pacifica 4(2): 109–116.

Scott AC 2000. The Pre–Quaternary history of fire. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 164: 297–345.

Scott AC 2010. Charcoal recognition, taphonomy and uses in palaeoenvironmental analyses. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 291: 11–39.

Scott AC, Bowman DMJS, Bond WJ, Pyne SJ & Alexander ME 2014. Fire on earth: an introduction. Fire Ecology vol. I, 434 pp., Wiley Blackwell Hoboken, New Jersey, USA.

Scott AC, Cripps J, Nichols G & Collinson ME 2000. The taphonomy of charcoal following a recent heathland fire and some implications for the interpretation of fossil charcoals. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 164: 1–31.

Scott AC & Damblon F 2010 Charcoal: taphonomy and significance in geology, botany and archeology. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 291: 1–10.

Shah SC, Singh G & Sastri MVA 1971. Biostratigraphic classification of Indian Gondwana. In: International Gondwana Symposium, Aligarh, India 1970. Annals Geology Department, Aligarh Muslim University, India 5–6: 306–326.

Sorkhabi S 2014. The Kachchh Basin of western India. Geoexpro 11(6): 30–34. Tryon RM & Tryon AF 1982. Ferns and allied plants with special reference to tropical America. New York Springer–Verlag.

Uhl D, Lausberg S, Noll R & Stapf KRG 2004. Wildfires in the Late Palaeozoic of Central Europe–an overview of the Rotliegend (Upper Carboniferous–Lower Permian) of the Saar–Nahe Basin (SW–Germany). Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 207: 23–35.

Umbanhower CE Jr & McGrath MJ 1998. Experimental production and analysis of microscopic charcoal from wood, leaves and grasses. The Holocene 8(3): 341–346.

Ujiié Y, Arata Y & Sugawara M 2003. Heating experiment on Pinus pollen grains and its relation to petroleum genesis. Geochemical Journal 37: 367–376.

Vaughan A & Nichols G 1995. Controls on the deposition of charcoal: implications for the sedimentary accumulation of fusain. Journal of Sedimentological Research A65(1): 129–135.

Vijaya 1997. Palynoflora from subsurface Lower Cretaceous Intertrappean beds in Domra Sub–basin of the Raniganj Gondwana Basin, West Bengal, India. Cretaceous Research 18(1): 37–50.

Whitlock C & Millspaugh SH 1996. Testing the assumption of the fire history studies: an examination of modern charcoal accumulation in Yellowstone National Park, U.S.A. The Holocene 6: 7–15.

Widsten P, Laine JE, Qvintus–Leino P & Tuominen S 2002. Effect of high–temperature defibration on the chemical structure of hardwood. Holzforschung 56: 51–59

Downloads

Published

2018-12-31

How to Cite

Kumar, M. (2018). Evidence of wildfire based on microscopic charcoal, spores and pollen grains from Early Cretaceous sediments of South Rewa and Kachchh basins, India. Journal of Palaeosciences, 67((1-2), 147–169. https://doi.org/10.54991/jop.2018.55

Issue

Section

Research Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 > >>