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phy·to·lith (fī'tō-lĭth') ![]() |
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| Archaeology Dictionary: phytolith |
Small hard rock-like bodies formed in the spaces between the living cells of a plant through the structured accumulation of silica brought into the cells with water. The identification of phytoliths from different plants preserved in archaeological material can provide an indication of the local vegetation.
| Wikipedia: Phytolith |
A phytolith ("plant stone") is a rigid microscopic body that occurs in many plants. The most common type of phytolith is the silica phytolith, also called opal phytolith. Silica phytoliths vary in size and shape depending on the plant taxon and plant part (stem, leaf, root) in which they (naturally) occur. Grasses, including rice, wild rice, maize, wheat, and other various grains; crop plants such as beans, squashes, gourds, manioc, canna, and arrowroot; palms; as well as numerous tree species are just some of the plants which contain phytoliths. Calcium oxalate phytoliths are another common type, occurring in the stems of cacti and baobabs. Phytoliths are mentioned in the writings of Charles Darwin[1].
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These objects serve a variety of purposes. In many cases, they appear to lend to the plant structure and support, much like the spicules in sponges and leather corals. Others serve to make plants distasteful, lending the plant's tissues a grainy or prickly texture. Finally, calcium oxalate phytoliths serve as a reserve of carbon dioxide. Cacti use these as a reserve for photosynthesis during the day when they close their pores to avoid water loss, while baobabs use this property to make their trunks more flame-resistant.
Phytoliths are very robust in nature, and are useful in archaeology, since they can be used to reconstruct the plants present at a site or an area within a site even though the rest of the plant parts have been burned up or dissolved. Because they are made of the inorganic substances silica or calcium oxalate, phytoliths don't decay when the rest of the plant decays over time and can survive in conditions that would destroy organic residues. Phytoliths can provide evidence of both economically important plants and those that are indicative of the environment at a particular time period.
Phytoliths may be extracted from residue on many sources: dental calculus (buildup on teeth); food preparation tools like rocks, grinders, and scrapers; cooking or storage containers; ritual offerings; and garden areas.
Phytoliths are abundant in the fossil record,[2] and have been reported from the late Devonian onwards.[2] They can be used to identify palaeoenvironments and track vegetational change.[2]
Occasionally, paleontologists find and identify phytoliths associated with extinct plant-eating animals (e.g., herbivores). Findings such as these reveal useful information about the diet of these extinct animals, and also shed light on the evolutionary history of many different types of plants. Paleontologists in India have recently identified grass phytoliths in dinosaur dung, strongly suggesting that the evolution of grasses began earlier than previously thought. [3]
Japanese and Korean archaeologists refer to grass and crop plant phytoliths as 'plant opal' in archaeological literature.
Recent work since 2005 has shown that carbon can be accumulated in phytoliths[4], and as such could provide a long term option to sequester carbon securely, as long-lasting silica.
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