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Object
Lesson
Flowers in stone
September/October 2008
by Leo J. Hickey
Leo J. Hickey, professor of geology and curator of
paleobotany at the Peabody Museum, specializes in the evolutionary history of
flowering plants.
Flowers are among the most ephemeral objects in nature, meant to attract pollinators, then to be quickly lost or transformed as the
plant sets fruit. Yet the longitudinal slice in this picture is from a flower
that has endured for over 125 million years. It has lasted partly because it
was made of tough stuff—a stout stem inside thick bracts and heavy fibers—and
partly because its tissues were eventually embedded in silica, a mineral harder
than steel.
This flower belongs to a bizarre group called cycadeoids,
extinct precursors of today’s flowering plants. Cycadeoids had barrel-shaped
trunks two to three feet high, with a crown of palm-like leaves and flowers.
Farmers have frequently mistaken the fossilized trunks for petrified versions
of old-fashioned straw beehives. A cycadeoid trunk was found standing in an
Etruscan tomb more than 4,000 years old, making it the first known fossil
collected.
Yale’s Peabody Museum has the world’s largest collection of
cycadeoids, with somewhat over a thousand trunks and pieces. The story of how
they came here began in the gold rush towns of the Black Hills of South Dakota.
In 1896, O. C. Marsh '60, the Peabody’s first director, heard that cycadeoids
had been discovered there and instructed his agent, H. F. Wells, to begin
acquiring them. One of the best sites lay on the south rim of the Hills, and a
rush had developed several years earlier to collect and sell the trunks that
littered the outcrop. By the time the U.S. government got around to protecting
this area as the Fossil Cycad National Monument in 1922, not a single cycadeoid
remained on the surface. The only Black Hills cycadeoids now available for
study are those saved by Wells and other scientific collectors.
The final episode in this story involves George Wieland
'00PhD, who arrived at Yale in 1898 to study vertebrate fossils but soon developed
a passion for cycadeoids that would last through a 50-year career. The size and
hardness of cycadeoid trunks had always discouraged their study, but Wieland found
that he could use the technology of local gravestone cutters to slice the
trunks into half-inch slabs. He pasted pieces of these onto plate-glass
rectangles and then laboriously ground them down, by hand, until they were thin
enough to reveal the incredibly detailed anatomy within. Today, even though
they have been extinct for over 85 million years, the cycadeoids are one of the
best-known groups of plants—thanks largely to George Wieland’s obsession.  |
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