Abstract

Miocene petrified tree fossils in tuffs from Lesvos Island show a variety of types of mineralization. Trees from the older part of the volcanic succession, including the well-known Petrified Forest near Sigri, are brilliant yellows, reds and browns as a result of Fe–Mn hydrothermal alteration post-dating silicification. Trees from the younger part of the volcanic succession on the southeastern flank of the volcanic chain include some in which the original carbon has not been replaced, others that are completely silicified or completely replaced by calcite, and yet others with cell walls silicified and the lumina filled with a variety of carbonate and sulfide minerals. Widespread Fe–Mn hydrothermal veins are found only in the older part of the volcanic succession and in underlying basement rocks and date from the inversion of the Sigri basin in the mid-Burdigalian and the intrusion of the Mesotopos dykes and laccoliths. The variable petrifaction of fossil wood is thus essentially a consequence of the variability of diagenetic and hydrothermal processes. This study demonstrates the importance of tectonic history in localising volcanic hydrothermal circulation and hence diversity in style of petrifaction.

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