4.5 Article

THE RISE OF FIRE: FOSSIL CHARCOAL IN LATE DEVONIAN MARINE SHALES AS AN INDICATOR OF EXPANDING TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS, FIRE, AND ATMOSPHERIC CHANGE

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE
Volume 315, Issue 8, Pages 713-733

Publisher

AMER JOURNAL SCIENCE
DOI: 10.2475/08.2015.01

Keywords

wildfire; charcoal; black shale; Devonian; oxygen levels

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [0310072]
  2. Society for Organic Petrology's Spackman Award
  3. Royal Holloway University of London
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences
  5. Directorate For Geosciences [0310072] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Fossil charcoal provides direct evidence for fire events that, in turn, have implications for the evolution of both terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere. Most of the ancient charcoal record is known from terrestrial or nearshore environments and indicates the earliest occurrences of fire in the Late Silurian. However, despite the rise in available fuel through the Devonian as vascular land plants became larger and trees and forests evolved, charcoal occurrences are very sparse until the Early Mississippian where extensive charcoal suggests well-established fire systems. We present data from the latest Devonian and Early Mississippian of North America from terrestrial and marine rocks indicating that fire became more widespread and significant at this time. This increase may be a function of rising O-2 levels and the occurrence of fire itself may have contributed to this rise through positive feedback. Recent atmospheric modeling suggests an O-2 low during the Middle Devonian (around 17.5%), with O-2 rising steadily through the Late Devonian and Early Mississippian (to 21-22%) that allowed for widespread burning for the first time. In Devonian-. Mississippian marine black shales, fossil charcoal (inertinite) steadily increases up-section suggesting the rise of widespread fire systems. There is a concomitant increase in the amount of vitrinite (preserved woody and other plant tissues) that also suggests increased sources of terrestrial organic matter. Even as end Devonian glaciation was experienced, fossil charcoal continued to be a source of organic matter being introduced into the Devonian oceans. Scanning electron and reflectance microscopy of charcoal from Late Devonian terrestrial sites indicate that the fires were moderately hot (typically 500-600 degrees C) and burnt mainly surface vegetation dominated by herbaceous zygopterid ferns and lycopsids, rather than being produced by forest crown fires. The occurrence and relative abundance of fossil charcoal in marine black shales are significant in that these shales may provide a more continuous record of fire than is preserved in terrestrial environments. Our data support the idea that major fires are not seen in the fossil record until there is both sufficient and connected fuel and a high enough atmospheric O-2 content for it to burn.

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