INSECT  IN  AMBER

 

Fossils in amber are some of the most intriguing remains of ancient organisms anywhere in the rock record.  Amber is fossilized tree sap (resin).  Fossilized tree resin is technically called resinite.  This piece of amber comes from the Baltics.  Baltic amber is some of the most famous on Earth.  Amber specimens from different localities are often given different varietal names.  Baltic amber is a type of resinite often called succinite.  Some amber has body fossil inclusions, and some doesn't.  The amber itself is a biogenic product, not a body fossil.

 

The Baltic amber shown below has a nice fossil inclusion.  The insect is a fly (Class Insecta, Order Diptera).

 

Insect in Baltic amber (polished; 16 mm across) from the Eocene of Yantarnyi, western Russia.

Note that this fossil fly is covered in a whitish milky material.  That is a decay coating.  This is commonly encountered in Baltic amber, and is one diagnostic method of identifying genuine succinite (there’s lots of fake amber fossils out there).  This amber specimen also has lots of minute, stellate trichomes (not visible in photo) that are also unfakeable (I think).  They are the “down”, the epidermal hairs on flowers & leaf buds from ancient oak trees.  These are abundantly preserved in genuine Baltic amber.

 


 

Stratigraphy: “Blue Earth layer”, “Amber Formation”, Lutetian Stage, lower Middle Eocene.

 

Locality: Yantarnyi, coastal western Samland Peninsula, western Kaliningrad District, Baltic Sea, far-western Russia.

 


 

 

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