Updated
Updated · Nautilus · Jul 15
China Discovery Pushes Amber Record Back 65 Million Years to 385 Million
Updated
Updated · Nautilus · Jul 15

China Discovery Pushes Amber Record Back 65 Million Years to 385 Million

3 articles · Updated · Nautilus · Jul 15

Summary

  • Tiny amber crystals found in coal from China’s Hujiersite Formation date to 385 million years ago, making them the oldest amber yet identified.
  • The Science Advances study pushes the known origin of resin back by 65 million years from the previous oldest amber, dated to about 320 million years ago in the Carboniferous.
  • That earlier date suggests Devonian trees evolved resin production sooner than thought, likely using it to seal wounds and defend against microbes or fire damage.
  • Chemical signatures resemble amber from conifer-type plants, but researchers said the source was more likely a tree-like lycopsid or a progymnosperm.

Insights

This discovery rewrites plant history. Could even older 'proto-amber' exist from the very first land plants?
Could new scanning technology reveal the first Devonian life forms hidden within this 385-million-year-old amber?
If not for insects, what ancient threat drove trees to evolve protective resin 385 million years ago?