Fossil Cycad

Object/Artifact

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Crater Rock Museum

Name/Title

Fossil Cycad

Entry/Object ID

2024.58.22

Description

Assemblage Zone: sandstone sediments Chemical Composition: Si O2 Crystal System: Hexagonal Description: Order: Cycadeoidales Family: Cycadeoidiaceae Common name: Fossil Cycad Age: Cretaceous Location data: Cedar Mountain Formation, Moab, Utah USA Description: Butt cut slab, with diamond shaped cycad cones inside Type of Fossils Present: Plants Fracture: conchoidal Grain Size: Fine Hardness: 7 Quartz Lithofacies: Fluvial System Luster: Glassy Occurrence: The Cedar Mountain Formation is a early Cretaceous formation that overlies the Morrison Formation on the Colorado Plateau in Utah. The overlying Cedar Mountain Formation is subdivided into two facies assemblages: (1) the Neocomian Buckhorn Conglomerate was deposited by northeast-trending, sandy-gravelly braided rivers that were incised into the underlying Morrison Formation; (2) an upper assemblage containing laterally stable, low-sinuosity, fluvial channel facies deposited during late Neocomian-Albian time. The base of the unit contains a thick calcrete zone that formed during an unconformity following Buckhorn deposition. . Fossilization occurs when the plant is buried and minerals dissolved in the groundwater, over millions of years, replace the original plant tissues. Fossilized cycads may occur as leaves or trunks. The trunks somewhat resemble overgrown pineapples turned to stone because of the armor of old leaf bases which protected them in life. Leaves are usually found as carbonized impressions in the rock. Pressure: Low-Moderate Rock Color: Medium Rock Origin: Post-depositional Rock Type: Sedimentary Specific Gravity: 2.6 Surface Process: Not apparent Streak: white Temperature: Low Texture: Mircrocrystalline Variety: The cycads are a group of very primitive ligneous plants bearing a superficial resemblance to palms, although they are not at all related. Cycad are often refer to as a "living fossils," since this group of plants had reached its highest point of evolution during the early Jurassic about 200 million years ago since then cycads have been declining without showing any appreciable changes in their evolution. Present cycads have many characteristics similar to the fossil cycads of 240 million years ago; thus, the name living fossils. Apparently, during the Triassic and Jurassic periods, the cycads enjoyed an abundant distribution, because nowadays, although often very localized, the existing species appear in places such as Polynesian, Madagascar, Japan, South Africa, tropical Africa, Australia, Mexico, Cuba, and Central and tropical America, which gives us an idea of the world-wide distribution that they had in the past.