Mineralogy of Petrified Wood from Costa Rica
2025
George E. Mustoe | Guillermo E. Alvarado | Armando J. Palacios
Costa Rica is located along the narrow isthmus that connected South America to North America beginning in the mid-Cenozoic. The exchange of vertebrates between the two continents has received considerable study, but paleobotanical aspects are less known. The Pacific coast &ldquo:ring of fire&rdquo: volcanoes produced abundant hyaloclastic material that provided a source of silica for wood petrifaction, and the tropical forests contained diverse taxa. This combination resulted in the preservation of petrified wood at many sites in Costa Rica. Fossil wood ranges in age from Lower Miocene to Middle Pleistocene, but Miocene specimens are the most common. Our research involved the study of 54 specimens, with the goal of determining their mineral compositions and interpreting the fossilization processes. Data came from thin-section optical microscopy, SEM images, and X-ray diffraction. Two specimens were found to be mineralized with calcite, but most of the woods contained crystalline quartz and/or opal-CT. The preservation of anatomical detail is highly variable. Some specimens show evidence of decay or structural deformation that preceded mineralization, but other woods have well-preserved cell structures. This preliminary study demonstrates the abundance and botanical diversity of fossil wood in Costa Rica, hopefully opening a door into future studies that will consider the taxonomy and evolutionary aspects of the country&rsquo:s fossil forests.
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