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Vibrant Arizona Triassic Petrified Wood Bookends

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North America, Southwestern United States, Arizona, Late Triassic, ca. 225 million years ago. A spectacular and large slab of fossilized or petrified tree trunk cut into book ends! The trunk was sliced crossways and sharp 90 degree sides, then highly polished on one of the planar faces to showcase the interior rings of the tree that have fossilized (petrified) into quartz and agate - the minerals that replaced the once organic tree material. Arizonian petrified wood is one of the most colorful and desirable types, often called "rainbow wood" as exemplified here in warm hues of red and maroon, lilac, and ochre yellow. The colors are otherworldly and drastically different than what the original wood must have been! Size: 10" L x 2.25" W x 11" H (25.4 cm x 5.7 cm x 27.9 cm)

Fossilized trees from this time period come from the Chinle Formation of the southwestern USA, and the beautiful colors found in this formation - exemplified by the colors of this fossilized tree - give the Painted Desert of Arizona its name. Due to plate tectonics, this area was near the equator on the supercontinent Pangaea during the Late Triassic, which gave it a humid, sub-tropical climate. It was a floodplain below mountains to its south and a sea to its west; as a result, massive trees washed down from the mountains and came to rest in sediments that preserved them and fossilized them. The petrification process involves the rapid burial of the tree or pieces under sediment which prevents the usual decay. Flooding and volcanic activity are usually responsible for creating the layers of sand, silt, and ash needed to create the right types and amount of sediment. Mineralized water can then permeate through the wood, coating cell walls and filling the intercellular cavities which then fossilizes into stone. The detailed preservation of the wood, including knots, rings, and bark, are possible because the organic wood molecules become coated and surrounded with smaller silica molecules. Nine different species of tree have been identified in the fossilized deposits in the region; this example may be Araucarioxylon arizonicum, an extinct conifer tree (and the state fossil of Arizona). Fascinatingly, the Ancestral Puebloan people who lived in the region approximately 1000 years ago used petrified wood for making tools and even building houses!

Provenance: private Van Buskirk collection, Tucson, Arizona USA

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#184729
Condition Report: Professionally cut and polished. Felt pads added to sides for stability and prevent scratches on furniture. One face is polished to a mirror finish and the other is not as polished and matte.

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Time, Location
26 Apr 2024
United States
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North America, Southwestern United States, Arizona, Late Triassic, ca. 225 million years ago. A spectacular and large slab of fossilized or petrified tree trunk cut into book ends! The trunk was sliced crossways and sharp 90 degree sides, then highly polished on one of the planar faces to showcase the interior rings of the tree that have fossilized (petrified) into quartz and agate - the minerals that replaced the once organic tree material. Arizonian petrified wood is one of the most colorful and desirable types, often called "rainbow wood" as exemplified here in warm hues of red and maroon, lilac, and ochre yellow. The colors are otherworldly and drastically different than what the original wood must have been! Size: 10" L x 2.25" W x 11" H (25.4 cm x 5.7 cm x 27.9 cm)

Fossilized trees from this time period come from the Chinle Formation of the southwestern USA, and the beautiful colors found in this formation - exemplified by the colors of this fossilized tree - give the Painted Desert of Arizona its name. Due to plate tectonics, this area was near the equator on the supercontinent Pangaea during the Late Triassic, which gave it a humid, sub-tropical climate. It was a floodplain below mountains to its south and a sea to its west; as a result, massive trees washed down from the mountains and came to rest in sediments that preserved them and fossilized them. The petrification process involves the rapid burial of the tree or pieces under sediment which prevents the usual decay. Flooding and volcanic activity are usually responsible for creating the layers of sand, silt, and ash needed to create the right types and amount of sediment. Mineralized water can then permeate through the wood, coating cell walls and filling the intercellular cavities which then fossilizes into stone. The detailed preservation of the wood, including knots, rings, and bark, are possible because the organic wood molecules become coated and surrounded with smaller silica molecules. Nine different species of tree have been identified in the fossilized deposits in the region; this example may be Araucarioxylon arizonicum, an extinct conifer tree (and the state fossil of Arizona). Fascinatingly, the Ancestral Puebloan people who lived in the region approximately 1000 years ago used petrified wood for making tools and even building houses!

Provenance: private Van Buskirk collection, Tucson, Arizona USA

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#184729
Condition Report: Professionally cut and polished. Felt pads added to sides for stability and prevent scratches on furniture. One face is polished to a mirror finish and the other is not as polished and matte.

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Estimate
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Reserve
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Time, Location
26 Apr 2024
United States
Auction House
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