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Burmese amber

Burmese amber, also known as Myanmar amber,[1] Burmite or Kachin amber, is amber from the Hukawng Valley in northern Myanmar. The amber is dated to around 100 million years ago, during the latest Albian to earliest Cenomanian ages of the mid-Cretaceous period. The amber is of significant palaeontological interest due to the diversity of flora and fauna contained as inclusions, particularly arthropods including insects and arachnids but also birds, lizards, snakes, frogs and fragmentary dinosaur remains. The amber has been known and commercially exploited since the first century AD, and has been known to science since the mid-nineteenth century. Research on the deposit has attracted controversy due to its alleged role in funding internal conflict in Myanmar and hazardous working conditions in the mines where it is collected.

Wing of the dragonfly Burmalindenia in a cabochon of Burmese amber, showing typical red colouration of the amber. Scale bar = 5mm

Geological context, depositional environment and age edit

 
Geological context of Burmese amber in northern Myanmar

The amber is found within the Hukawng Basin, a large Cretaceous-Cenozoic sedimentary basin within northern Myanmar. The strata have undergone folding and faulting. The Hukawng basin is part of the larger Myanmar Central Basin, a N-S orientated synclinal basin extending to the Gulf of Martaban to the south. The basin is considered to be a part of the West Burma block (a.k.a. Burma Terrane), which has a debated tectonic history, it is considered to be associated with the concepts of the Cimmeria and Sibumasu terranes. The block was part of Gondwana during at least the Early Paleozoic, but the timing of rifting is very uncertain, with estimates ranging from the Devonian to Early Cretaceous. It is also disputed whether the block had accreted onto the Asian continental margin by the time of the amber deposition.[2] Some members of the flora and fauna have Gondwanan affinities,[3] while others have Laurasian affinities.[4] A recent paleomagnetic reconstruction finds that the Burma Terrane formed an island land mass in the Tethys Ocean during the Mid Cretaceous at a latitude around 5-10 degrees south of the equator.[5]

At Noije Bum, located on a ridge, amber is found within fine grained clastic rocks, typically medium to greyish green in colour, resulting from the constituent grains being black, yellow, grey and light green. The fine grained rocks are primarily fine to very fine grained sandstone, with beds of silt and shale and laterally persistent thin (1–2 mm thick) coal horizons. Massive micritic limestone interbeds of 6-8 centimetre thickness, often containing coalified plant material also occur. This facies association is typically around 1 metre thick and typically thinly bedded and laminated. Associated with the fine grained facies is a set of medium facies primarily consisting of medium to fine grained sandstones also containing thin beds of siltstone, shale and conglomerate, alongside a persistent conglomerate horizon. A specimen of the ammonite Mortoniceras has been found in a sandstone bed 2 metres above the amber horizon, alongside indeterminate gastropods and bivalves.[6] Lead-uranium dating of zircon crystals of volcanic clasts within the amber bearing horizons has given a maximum age of 98.79 ± 0.62  million years ago (Ma), making the deposit earliest Cenomanian in age.[7] Unpublished data by Wang Bo on other layers suggests an age range of deposition of at least 5 million years.[8] The amber does not appear to have undergone significant transport since hardening or be redeposited. The strata at the site are younging upwards, striking north north-east and dipping 50-70 degrees E and SE north of the ridge and striking between south south-east and south-east and dipping 35-60 degrees south-west south of the ridge, suggesting the site is on the northwest limb of a syncline plunging to the northeast. A minor fault with a conspicuous gouge zone was noted as present, though it appeared to have no significant displacement.[6] Several other localities are known, including the colonial Khanjamaw and the more recent Inzutzut, Angbamo, and Xipiugong sites, within the vicinity of Tanai. The Hkamti site SW of the Hukawng basin has been determined to be significantly older, dating to the early Albian around ca. 110 Ma and is therefore considered distinct.[9]

Paleoenvironment edit

 
A Puzosia (Bhimaites) species juvenile shell in Burmese amber

The Burmese amber paleoforest is considered to have been a tropical rainforest, situated near the coast, where resin was subsequently transported into a shallow marine environment. The shell of a dead juvenile Puzosia (Bhimaites) ammonite, four marine gastropod shells (including Mathilda) and littoral or supralittoral isopods entombed in a piece of amber with shell sand,[10] along with growth of Isocrinid crinoids, corals and oysters on the surface of some amber pieces indicate marine conditions for final deposition.[11] Additionally pholadid (piddock) bivalve borings into amber specimens along with at least one pholadid which became trapped was interpreted to show that the resin was still fresh and unhardened when it was being moved into the tidal areas.[12] However, the phloladids in question, belonging to the extinct genus Palaeolignopholas, were later interpreted as a freshwater species, and the presence of numerous freshwater insects suggests that the initial environment of deposition was a downstream estuarine to freshwater section of a river, with the forests extending across coastal rivers, river deltas, lakes, lagoons, and coastal bays.[13] The forest environment may have been prone to fire, similar to modern tropical peat swamps, based on the presence of fire adapted plants and burned plant remains found in the amber.[14]

The amber itself is primarily disc-shaped and flattened along the bedding plane, and is typically reddish brown, with the colour ranging from shades of yellow to red. The opacity of the amber ranges from clear to opaque. Many amber pieces have thin calcite veins that are typically less than 1 mm (0.04 in), but up to 4–5 mm (0.16–0.20 in) thick. The number and proportion of veins in a piece of amber varies significantly, in some pieces veins are virtually absent, while others are described as being "packed with veinlets"[6] The amber is considered to be of coniferous origin, with a likely araucarian source tree, based on spectroscopic analysis and wood fragment inclusions,[15] though a pine origin has also been suggested.[16]

Fauna and flora edit

The list of taxa is extraordinarily diverse, with over 42 classes, 108 orders, 569 families, 1017 genera and 1379 species described as of the end of 2019, with over 300 species described in 2019 alone, the vast majority (94%) of which are arthropods. A complete list of taxa up until the end of 2018 can be found in Ross 2018[17] And a supplement covering most of 2019 can be found in Ross 2019b.[18] For the sake of brevity, a complete list of taxa is not given here, and the classification is mostly at family level. For a more complete list of taxa, see Paleobiota of Burmese amber.

Invertebrates edit

Well over 1000 species of invertebrates are known from the deposit, including, notably the oldest members of Palpigradi (Electrokoenenia)[19] and Schizomida (Mesozomus)[20] the oldest peripatid Velvet worm (Cretoperipatus)[21] and the only known fossil members of Mesothelae and Ricinulei since the Paleozoic. Chimerarachne is a unique stem spider still possessing a tail, with similar forms only known from the Paleozoic.

Arachnids edit

Araneae edit

Forty-four families of spiders are known from the Burmese amber, including: Archaeidae, †Burmadictynidae, †Burmascutidae, †Burmathelidae, Clubionidae, Corinnidae, †Cretaceothelidae, Deinopidae, Dipluridae, †Eopsilodercidae, †Fossilcalcaridae, Hersiliidae, Hexathelidae, †Lagonomegopidae, Leptonetidae, Liphistiidae, †Micropalpimanidae, †Mongolarachnidae, Mysmenidae, Ochyroceratidae, Oecobiidae, Oonopidae, Oxyopidae, Palpimanidae, †Parvithelidae, Pholcidae, †Pholcochyroceridae, †Plumorsolidae, †Praearaneidae, †Praeterleptonetidae, Psechridae, Psilodercidae, Salticidae, Segestriidae, Telemidae, Tetrablemmidae, Tetragnathidae, Theridiosomatidae, Theridiidae, Thomisidae, Uloboridae and †Vetiaroridae.

Acariformes edit
 
Immensmaris chewbaccei (Acariformes:Smarididae)

Twenty families of acariformes are known from the Burmese amber, including: Anystidae, Archaeorchestidae, Bdellidae, Caeculidae, Cheyletidae, Enantioppiidae, Eremaeidae, Erythraeidae, Eupodidae, Gymnodamaeidae, Malaconothridae, Microtrombidiidae, Neoliodidae, Oribatellidae, Oribotritiidae, Resinacaridae, Smarididae, Trombellidae, Trombidiidae and Tuckerellidae.

Opiliones edit

Nine families of opiliones are known from the Burmese amber, including: Beloniscidae, Epedanidae, †Halithersidae, †Mesokanidae,†Monooculricinuleidae, ?Pyramidopidae Sclerosomatidae, Stylocellidae and Tithaeidae.

Pseudoscorpiones edit
 
Procheiridium judsoni (Pseudoscorpiones:Cheiridiidae)

Twelve families of pseudoscorpions are known from the Burmese amber, including: Atemnidae, Cheiridiidae, Cheliferidae, Chernetidae, Chthoniidae, Feaellidae, Garypinidae, Hyidae Ideoroncidae, Neobisiidae, Pseudocheiridiidae and Withiidae.

Scorpiones edit
 
Betaburmesebuthus bellus (Scorpiones:†Palaeoburmesebuthidae)

Seven families of scorpions are known from the Burmese amber, including: Buthidae, Chaerilidae, †Chaerilobuthidae, †Palaeoburmesebuthidae, †Palaeoeuscorpiidae, †Palaeotrilineatidae and †Sucinolourencoidae.

Parasitiformes edit

Seven families of parasitiformes are known from the Burmese amber, including: Argasidae, †Deinocrotonidae, †Khimairidae, Ixodidae, Opilioacaridae, Polyaspididae and Sejidae.

Schizomida edit

One family of schizomida is known from the Burmese amber: Hubbardiidae

Palpigradi edit

One genus of palpigradi is known: Electrokoenenia, which belongs to Eukoeneniidae

Amblypygi edit

Two genera of Amblypygi are known: Kronocharon and Burmacharon which do not belong to any extant family.

Solfugae edit

One genus of camel spider is known: Cushingia, which does not belong to any extant family.

Thelyphonida edit

Two genera of whip scorpion are known: Mesothelyphonus, which belongs to Thelyphonidae and Burmathelyphonia, which does not belong to any extant family.

Ricinulei edit

Three genera of Ricinulei are known: Hirsutisoma, ?Poliochera (an otherwise Carboniferous taxon) and Primoricinuleus, none of which belong to extant families

Myriapoda edit

 
Burmanopetalum inexpectatum (Callipodida)

Sixteen families of Myriapods are known, including: Anthroleucosomatidae, †Electrocambalidae, Tingupidae, Glomeridellidae, Andrognathidae, Paradoxosomatidae, Polydesmidae, Polyxenidae, Synxenidae, Polyzoniidae, Siphoniulidae, Siphonophoridae, Siphonorhinidae, Zephroniidae, Cambalidae, Scolopendrellidae and †Burmanopetalidae.

Entognatha edit

Eight families of Entognathans are known, including: Campodeidae, Japygidae, Isotomidae, †Praentomobryidae, Tomoceridae, Neanuridae, Odontellidae and Sminthuridae.

Insects edit

Archaeognatha edit

Two families of archaeognathans are known from the Burmese amber: Machilidae and Meinertellidae

Zygentoma edit

One family of Zygentoman is known: Lepismatidae

Ephemeroptera edit
 
Vetuformosa buckleyi (Ephemeroptera)

Seven families of mayfly are known: †Australiphemeridae, Baetidae, Ephemeridae, Heptageniidae, †Hexagenitidae, Isonychiidae, Prosopistomatidae.

Odonata edit

Twenty families of odonatan are known from the Burmese amber, including: Aeshnidae, †Araripegomphidae, †Burmacoenagrionidae, †Burmaeshnidae, †Burmagomphidae, †Burmaphlebiidae, Calopterygidae, Coenagrionidae, Dysagrionidae, Gomphaeschnidae, Gomphidae, Hemiphlebiidae, Libellulidae, Lindeniidae, Megapodagrionidae, †Mesomegaloprepidae, †Paracoryphagrionidae, Perilestidae, Platycnemididae, Platystictidae.

Hymenopterans edit
 
Diversinitus attenboroughi (Hymenoptera:†Diversinitidae)

Over fifty families of hymenopterans have been described beginning with the papers of Cockerell who described a group of Bethylidae and Aulacidae species between 1917 and 1920. The monotypic family Melittosphecidae is only known from the Burmese amber species Melittosphex burmensis and eight species belonging to Aptenoperissus of the monotypic family Aptenoperissidae are also known. Originally described as an Aneuretinae ant Burmomyrma rossi was moved to the extinct Chrysidoidea family Falsiformicidae.[22] A number of Formicidae species known, belonging to Baikuris (indet) Camelomecia janovitzi, Ceratomyrmex ellenbergeri, 11 species of Gerontoformica, 3 species of Haidomyrmex, Linguamyrmex vladi, 2 species of Zigrasimecia, Dhagnathos autokrator, Chonidris insolita, Aquilomyrmex huangi, Protoceratomyrmex revelatus and Linguamyrmex brevicornis. Other families include Ampulicidae, Braconidae, Cephidae, Ceraphronidae, Chalcididae, Chrysididae, Crabronidae, Diapriidae, Dryinidae, Embolemidae, Evaniidae, Gasteruptiidae, Geoscelionidae, Heloridae, Ichneumonidae, Megalyridae, Megaspilidae, Mymaridae, Mymarommatidae, Pelecinidae, Platygastridae, Rhopalosomatidae. Rotoitidae, Sapygidae, Scelionidae, Sclerogibbidae, Scolebythidae, Sepulcidae, Sierolomorphidae, Siricidae, Sparasionidae, Sphecidae, Stephanidae, Tiphiidae, Vespidae, Xiphydriidae, †Angarosphecidae, †Aptenoperissidae, †Bryopompilidae, †Burmorussidae †Burmusculidae, †Chrysobythidae, †Dipterommatidae, †Diversinitidae, †Falsiformicidae, †Gallorommatidae, †Ohlhoffiidae, †Panguidae, †Plumalexiidae, †Maimetshidae, †Myanmarinidae, †Othniodellithidae, †Peleserphidae, †Praeaulacidae, †Proterosceliopsidae, †Serphitidae, †Spathiopterygidae, †Syspastoxyelidae and several incertae sedis taxa.

 
Bamara groehni (Diptera:Psychodidae)
Dipterans edit

Over forty families of dipterans are known from the Burmese amber, including: Acroceridae, Anisopodidae, Apsilocephalidae, Apystomyiidae, Asilidae, Atelestidae, Blephariceridae, Bombyliidae, Cecidomyiidae, Ceratopogonidae, Chaoboridae, Chironomidae, Corethrellidae, Culicidae, Diadocidiidae, Dolichopodidae, Empididae, Hybotidae, Ironomyiidae, Keroplatidae, Limoniidae, Lygistorrhinidae, Mycetophilidae, Mythicomyiidae, Nemestrinidae, Phoridae, Pipunculidae, Platypezidae, Psychodidae, Ptychopteridae, Rachiceridae, Rhagionidae, Scatopsidae, Sciaridae, Stratiomyidae, Tabanidae, Tanyderidae, Tipulidae, Valeseguyidae, Xylomyidae, †Archizelmiridae, †Chimeromyiidae, †Eremochaetidae, †Eucaudomyiidae, †Mysteromyiidae, †Rhagionemestriidae, †Tethepomyiidae, †Zhangsolvidae and several incertae sedis taxa.

Coleopterans edit
 
Electroxyra (Coleoptera:Cyclaxyridae)

Over ninety families of coleopterans are known from the Burmese amber, including: Aderidae, Anthicidae, Anthribidae, †Apotomouridae, Belidae, Boganiidae, Bostrichidae, Brachypsectridae, Buprestidae, Cantharidae, Carabidae, Caridae, Cerambycidae, Cerophytidae, Cerylonidae, Chrysomelidae, Ciidae, Clambidae, Cleridae, Cucujidae, Cupedidae, Curculionidae, Cyclaxyridae, Dascillidae, Dermestidae, Dytiscidae, Elateridae, Elmidae, Endomychidae, Eucinetidae, Eucnemidae, Geotrupidae, Glaresidae, Gyrinidae, Heteroceridae, Histeridae, Hybosoridae, Hydraenidae, Hydrophilidae, Jacobsoniidae, Kateretidae, Laemophloeidae, Lampyridae, Latridiidae, Leiodidae, Lepiceridae, Lucanidae, Lycidae, Lymexylidae, Melandryidae, Meloidae, Melyridae, †Mesophyletidae, Micromalthidae, Monotomidae, Mordellidae, †Mysteriomorphidae, Nemonychidae, Nitidulidae, Oedemeridae, Ommatidae, Passalidae, †Parandrexidae, †Passalopalpidae, Passandridae, Phloeostichidae, Prostomidae, Psephenidae, Ptiliidae, Ptinidae, Ptilodactylidae, Ripiphoridae, Salpingidae, Scarabaeidae, Scirtidae, Scraptiidae, Silphidae, Silvanidae, Smicripidae, Sphaeriusidae, Staphylinidae, Tenebrionidae, Tetratomidae, Thanerocleridae, Throscidae, Trogidae, Trogossitidae and Zopheridae.

 
Parababinskaia (Neuroptera:†Babinskaiidae)
Neuroptera edit

Over twenty families of neuropterans are known from the Burmese amber, including: †Araripeneuridae, Ascalaphidae, †Babinskaiidae, Berothidae, Chrysopidae, Coniopterygidae, †Corydasialidae, Dilaridae, †Dipteromantispidae, Hemerobiidae, Ithonidae, Kalligrammatidae, Mantispidae, †Mesochrysopidae, Myrmeleontidae, Nemopteridae, Nevrorthidae, Nymphidae, Osmylidae, Psychopsidae, Rachiberothidae, Sisyridae and several incertae sedis taxa.

Hemiptera edit
 
Mimaplax ekrypsan (Hemiptera:†Mimarachnidae)

Over sixty families of hemipterans are known from the Burmese amber, including: Achilidae, †Albicoccidae, Aleyrodidae, Aphrophoridae, Aradidae, †Berstidae, †Burmacoccidae, †Burmitaphidae, Callaphididae, Cercopidae, Cicadellidae, Cicadidae, Cimicidae, Cixiidae, Coccidae, Coreidae, Cydnidae, Dictyopharidae, †Dinglidae Dipsocoridae, †Dorytocidae, Enicocephalidae, Fulgoridae, Gelastocoridae, Gerridae, †Hodgsonicoccidae, Hydrometridae, Issidae, †Jubisentidae, †Juraphididae, †Katlasidae, Kinnaridae, †Kozariidae, †Lalacidae, Leptopodidae, †Liadopsyllidae, †Macrodrilidae, Margarodidae, Matsucoccidae, †Mimarachnidae, †Minlagerrontidae, Miridae, Monophlebidae, Naucoridae, Nabidae, †Neazoniidae, Ochteridae, Ortheziidae,†Palaeoleptidae, †Parvaverrucosidae, †Perforissidae, †Protopsyllidiidae, †Procercopidae, Pseudococcidae, Reduviidae, Schizopteridae, †Sinoalidae, †Tajmyraphididae, Tettigarctidae, Tingidae, Tropiduchidae, Velocipedidae, Veliidae, †Weitschatidae, Xylococcidae, †Yetkhatidae, †Yuripopovinidae and several incertae sedis taxa such as Mesophthirus, formerly believed to be an ectoparasite but since determined to be a basal scale insect.[23]

Dictyoptera edit

Twenty one families of dictyopterans are known from the Burmese amber, including: Blaberidae, †Blattulidae, Blattidae, †Caloblattinidae, Corydiidae, Ectobiidae, †Olidae, †Liberiblattinidae, †Alienopteridae, †ManipulatoridaeUmenocoleidae , Nocticolidae, †Pabuonqedidae Termites (†Archeorhinotermitidae, Hodotermitidae, Stolotermitidae, Termitidae and Mastotermitidae) and mantid Burmantis.

Mecoptera edit

Six families of mecopteran are known, including: Bittacidae, Eomeropidae, Meropeidae, †Orthophlebiidae , †Pseudopolycentropodidae and †Aneuretopsychidae.

 
Burmacompsocus (Psocoptera:Compsocidae)
Psocoptera edit

Ten families of psocopteran are known, including: †Archaeatropidae, Compsocidae, †CormopsocidaeEmpheriidae, Liposcelididae, Manicapsocidae, Pachytroctidae, Prionoglarididae, Psyllipsocidae, Sphaeropsocidae and Trogiidae.

Orthoptera edit

Seven families of orthopteran are known, including: †Elcanidae, Gryllidae, Mogoplistidae, Ripipterygidae, Tetrigidae, Tettigoniidae and Tridactylidae

Trichoptera edit

Eight families of trichopteran are known, including: Calamoceratidae, †Dysoneuridae, Helicopsychidae, Hydroptilidae, Odontoceridae, Philopotamidae, Polycentropodidae and Psychomyiidae.

Dermaptera edit
 
Astreptolabis laevis (Dermaptera:Pygidicranidae)

Five families of dermapteran are known, including: Anisolabididae, Diplatyidae, Labiduridae and Pygidicranidae.

Embioptera edit

Four families of embiopteran are known, including: Clothodidae, Oligotomidae, Notoligotomidae and †Sorellembiidae.

"Grylloblattida" edit

One family of "grylloblattidan" (a possibly polyphyletic group of insects suggested to be closely related to Notoptera), Aristoviidae is known, containing the single genus Aristovia.[24] A "grylloblattidan" nymph Sylvalitoralis cheni, is also known, but is not assigned to any family.[25]

 
Heterobathmilla kakopoios (Strepsiptera:†Phthanoxenidae)
Strepsiptera edit

Two families of strepsipteran are known, †Cretostylopidae and †Phthanoxenidae

Lepidoptera edit

Six families of lepidopteran are known, including: Agathiphagidae, Douglasiidae, Gelechiidae, Gracillariidae, Lophocoronidae and Micropterigidae.

Megaloptera edit

One species of megalopteran is known, Haplosialodes liui of the family Sialidae.

Phasmatodea edit

Four families of phasmatodean are known: †Archipseudophasmatidae, Phasmatidae. †Pterophasmatidae and Timematidae

 
Rohrthrips jiewenae
Thysanoptera edit

Five families of thrips are known, including: Aeolothripidae, Melanthripidae, †Rohrthripidae, Thripidae and Stenurothripidae.

 
Largusoperla billwymani, a member of Plecoptera
Plecoptera edit

Two families of stoneflies are known, Perlidae and †Petroperlidae.

Raphidioptera edit
 
Nanoraphidia (Raphidioptera:†Mesoraphidiidae)

One family of Raphidiopteran is known, †Mesoraphidiidae.

†Chresmodidae edit

A species of the enigmatic long legged chresmodid insect Chresmoda is known.[26]

†Tarachoptera edit

One family of Tarachopteran is known: †Tarachocelidae

†Permopsocida edit

One family of Permopsocidan is known: †Archipsyllidae

 
Zorotypus pecten
Zoraptera edit

Multiple species of Zorotypus and the monotypic genus Xenozorotypus are known.

Nematoda edit

Five families of nematodes are known, including: Cosmocercidae, Heterorhabditidae, Mermithidae, Thelastomatidae, Aphelenchoididae

Nematomorpha edit

One genus of nematomorph is known: Cretachordodes (Chordodidae, Gordioidea)

Mollusca edit

 
Shell of Archaeocyclotus, a member of Cyclophoridae

Aside from the previously mentioned ammonites and marine gastropod shells, Seven families of terrestrial gastropod are known: Diplommatinidae, Pupinidae, Achatinidae, Punctidae, Valloniidae, Assimineidae and Cyclophoridae[27][28][29]

 
Holotype specimen of frog Electrorana

Vertebrates edit

While the deposit is well known for invertebrate inclusions, some vertebrate inclusions have been found as well. One of the more notable discoveries was a well preserved theropod dinosaur tail, with preserved feathers.[30] As well as fossils of enantiornithine birds including juveniles[31][32] and partial wings and preserved feet,[33][34][35][36] including a diagnostic taxon, Elektorornis.[37] A complete skull of the lizard Oculudentavis is known.[38] Electrorana is a well preserved frog known from the amber.[39] Other notable specimens include an embryonic snake.[40] Several specimens of lizard have been described from the deposit[41] including a gecko with preserved toe pads (Cretaceogekko).[42] and a miniaturised (~2 cm) long possible stem-anguimorph (Barlochersaurus)[43]

One of the "lizard" specimens was initially described to be a chamaeleonid, actually turned out to be an albanerpetontid amphibian.[44] This was described in 2020 as the new genus and species Yaksha perettii.[45]

 
Radula cretacea

Flora edit

Angiosperms edit

Eleven species of Angiosperm are known in nine genera, including members of Cornaceae, Cunoniaceae, Lauraceae, ?Monimiaceae and Laurales incertae sedis. Poales incertae sedis and Angiosperm incertae sedis.

Bryopsida edit

Two genera of Bryopsida in the separate orders Dicranales and Hypnodendrales

Jungermanniopsida edit

Three families of Jungermanniopsida are known, Frullaniaceae, Lepidolaeanaceae, Radulaceae.

 
Cystodium sorbifolioides

Pinophyta edit

Two families of Pinopsida are known: Araucariaceae and Cupressaceae including Metasequoia.

Pteridopsida edit

Five families of Pteridopsidan are known: Cystodiaceae, Dennstaedtiaceae, Lindsaeaceae, Pteridaceae, Thyrsopteridaceae, and several genera of Polypodiales incertae sedis.

Amoebozoa edit

Myxogastria edit

Sporocarps of extant myxogastrid slime mould genus Stemonitis are known.[46]

Dictyostelia edit

A possible dictyostelid Paleoplastes burmanica has been described.[47]

History edit

The amber is apparently referred to in ancient Chinese sources as originating from Yunnan Province as early as the first century AD according to the Book of the Later Han and trade with China had been ongoing for centuries. This has been confirmed by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis of amber artifacts from the Eastern Han Dynasty (25 - 220 CE).[48] It was first mentioned in European sources by the Jesuit Priest Álvaro Semedo who visited China in 1613, it was described as being "digged out of mines, and sometimes in great pieces, it is redder than our amber though not so cleane".[49] The locality itself has been known to European explorers since the 1800s with visitation to the Hukawng Valley by Simon Fraser Hannay in 1836–1837.[50][51] At that time the principle products of the valley mines were salt, gold, and amber, with the majority of gold and amber being bought by Chinese traders. Hannay visited the amber mines themselves on March 21, 1836, and he noted that the last three miles to the mines were marked with numerous abandoned pits, up to 15 ft (4.6 m) in depth, where amber had been dug in the past. The mining had moved over the hill to a series of 10 pits but no visible amber was seen, suggesting that miners possibly hid the amber found that day before the party arrived. Mining was being performed manually at the time through the use of sharpened bamboo rods and small wooden shovels. Finer pieces of amber were recovered from the deeper pits, with clear yellow being recovered from depths of 40 ft (12 m) The recovered amber was bought with silver or often exchanged for jackets, hats, copper pots, or opium among other goods. mixed and lower quality amber was sold from around 1/ ticals to 4 rupees per seer. Pieces that were considered high quality or fit for use as ornamentation were described as expensive, and price varied depending on the clarity and color of the amber. Women of the valley were noted to wear amber earrings as part of their jewelry.[50] In 1885 the Konbaung dynasty was annexed to the British Raj and a survey of the area was conducted by Dr. Fritz Noetling on behalf of the Geological Survey of India.[49] The final research before Burmese independence in 1947 was conducted by Dr. H.L. Chhibber in 1934, who provided the most detailed description of Burmite occurrences.[49]

History of research edit

While a 1892 study considered the amber likely to be Miocene in age, a study by Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell in 1916 noted archaic nature of the insects, and concluded that the amber must be older, and possibly as old as the Late Cretaceous. Various later authors during the mid-late 20th century suggested either a Paleocene-Eocene or an Late Cretaceous age. A Cretaceous age was confirmed during the early 2000s.[49] While during the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century research on the deposit was low intensity, during the mid-2010s there was a great increase number of papers published on the deposit, numbering hundreds every year, with a plurality coming from Chinese researchers.[52]

Modern exploitation and controversy edit

 
Miners digging and sorting Burmese amber at Noije Bum in the Hukawng Valley, undated photograph

Leeward Capital Corp, a small Canadian mining firm, controlled the deposit from the mid-1990s to c. 2000, though the history of exploitation during the 2000s is obscure. The Kachin Independence Army (KIA), an armed rebel group seeking to secede Kachin province from Myanmar, controlled the area during the early to mid 2010's. During the early 2010s, production rapidly increased. The working conditions at the mines have been described as extremely unsafe, down 100 m (330 ft) deep pits barely wide enough to crawl through, with no accident compensation.[8] The KIA controlled amber export via numerous licenses, taxes, restrictions on movement of labor, and enforced auctions.[53] The main amber market in Myanmar is Myitkyina. Most amber is smuggled into China, primarily for jewelry, with estimates of around 100 tonnes passing through to the main market of Tengchong, Yunnan in 2015, with an estimated value between five and seven billion yuan. Burmese amber was estimated to make up 30% of Tenchong's gemstone market (the rest being Myanmar Jade), and was declared one of the city's eight main industries by the local government.[54] The presence of calcite veins are a major factor in determining the gem quality of pieces, with pieces with a large number of veins having significantly lower value.[6] In June 2017 the Tatmadaw seized control of the mines from the KIA.[55]

Sales of amber were alleged to help fund the Kachin conflict by various news organisations in 2019.[56][57] Interest in this discussion rose in March 2020 after the highly publicised description of Oculudentavis, which made the cover of Nature.[58] On April 21, 2020, the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) published a letter of recommendation to journal editors asking for “a moratorium on publication for any fossil specimens purchased from sources in Myanmar after June 2017 when the Myanmar military began its campaign to seize control of the amber mining”.[59] On April 23, 2020 Acta Palaeontologica Polonica stated that it would not accept papers on Burmese amber material collected from 2017 onwards, after the Burmese military took control of the deposit, requiring "certification or other demonstrable evidence, that they were acquired before the date both legally and ethically".[60] On May 13, 2020, the Journal of Systematic Palaeontology published an editorial stating that it would no longer consider papers based whole or in part on Burmese amber material, regardless of whether in historic collections or not.[61] On 30 June 2020, a statement from the International Palaeoentomological Society was published in response to the SVP, criticising the proposal to ban publishing on Burmese amber material.[62] In August 2020, a comment from over 50 authors was published in PalZ responding to the SVP statement. The authors disagreed with the proposal of a moratorium, describing the focus on the Burmese amber as "arbitrary" and that "The SVP’s recommendation for a moratorium on Burmese amber affects fossil non-vertebrate research much more than fossil vertebrate research and clearly does not represent this part of the palaeontological community."[63]

The conclusion that Burmese amber funded the Tatmadaw was disputed by George Poinar and Sieghard Ellenberger, who found that the supply of amber collapsed after the 2017 takeover of the mines by the Tatmadaw, and that most of the current circulation of amber in Chinese markets was extracted prior to 2017.[64] A story in Science in 2019 stated: "Two former mine owners, speaking through an interpreter in phone interviews, say taxes have been even steeper since government troops took control of the area. Both shut their mines when they became unprofitable after the government takeover, and almost all deep mines are now out of business, dealers here corroborate. Only shallow mines and perhaps a few secret operations are still running."[8] There were around 200,000 miners working in the Hukawng valley mines prior to the takeover by the Tatmadaw, which shrunk to 20,000 or less after the military operations.[53] Adolf Peretti, a gemologist who owns a museum with Burmese amber specimens, noted that the 2017 cutoff suggested by the SVP does not take into account that the export of Burmese amber prior to 2017 was also funding internal conflict in Myanmar due to the control by the KIA.[53] Much of the amber cutting since 2017 has been done in internally displaced person camps, under humanitarian and non-conflict conditions.[53]

Other Myanmar ambers edit

Other deposits of amber are known from several regions in Myanmar, with noted deposits in the Shwebo District of the Sagaing Region, from the Pakokku and Thayet districts of Magway Region and the Bago District of the Bago Region.[65][51] Unlike the Hukawng deposit, none of these sources have produced notable quantities of amber.[citation needed]

Tilin amber edit

A 2018 study on an amber deposit from Tilin in central Myanmar indicated that deposit to be 27 million years younger than the Hukawng deposit, dating to approximately 72 million years old, placing it in the latest Campanian age. The deposit was associated with an overlying tuffaceous layer, and underlying nodules of brown sandstone yielded remains of the ammonite Sphenodiscus. Within a number of arthropod specimens were described though much more poorly preserved than specimens in the Hukawng amber. These include members of Hymenoptera (Braconidae, Diapriidae, Scelionidae) Diptera (Ceratopogonidae, Chironomidae) Dictyoptera (Blattaria, Mantodea) planthoppers, Berothidae and bark lice (Lepidopsocidae) as well as extant ant subfamilies Dolichoderinae and tentatively Ponerinae, as well as fragments of moss.[66]

Hkamti amber edit

The Hkamti site is located ca. 90 km southwest of the Angbamo site and predominantly consists of limestone, interbedded with mudstone and tuff, the amber is found within the unconsolidated mudstone/tuff layers. A crinoid was found attached to one amber specimen, alongside marine plant remains in the surrounding sediment, indicating deposition in a shallow marine setting. The amber is generally red-brown, and yellow colouration is rare, the amber is generally found as angular clasts, indicating short transport distance and is more brittle than other northern Myanmar ambers. Zircon dating has constrained the age of the deposit to the early Albian, c. 110 Ma, significantly older than the dates obtained from other deposits. Fauna found within the amber includes: Archaeognatha, Diplopoda, Coleoptera, Araneae, Trichoptera, Neuroptera, Psocodea, Isoptera Diptera, Orthoptera, Pseudoscorpionida, Hymenoptera and Thysanoptera.[9] A lizard, Retinosaurus, has also been described from the locality.[67]

See also edit

References edit

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  65. ^ Zherikhin, V. V.; Ross, A. J. (2000). "A review of the history, geology and age of Burmese amber burmite". Bulletin of the Natural History Museum, Geology Series.
  66. ^ Zheng, D.; Chang, S.-C.; Perrichot, V.; Dutta, S.; Rudra, A.; Mu, L.; Kelly, R. S.; Li, S.; Zhang, Q.; Zhang, Q.; Wong, J. (December 2018). "A Late Cretaceous amber biota from central Myanmar". Nature Communications. 9 (1): 3170. Bibcode:2018NatCo...9.3170Z. doi:10.1038/s41467-018-05650-2. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 6085374. PMID 30093646.
  67. ^ Čerňanský, Andrej; Stanley, Edward L.; Daza, Juan D.; Bolet, Arnau; Arias, J. Salvador; Bauer, Aaron M.; Vidal-García, Marta; Bevitt, Joseph J.; Peretti, Adolf M.; Aung, Nyi Nyi; Evans, Susan E. (2022-01-31). "A new Early Cretaceous lizard in Myanmar amber with exceptionally preserved integument". Scientific Reports. 12 (1): 1660. Bibcode:2022NatSR..12.1660C. doi:10.1038/s41598-022-05735-5. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 8803969. PMID 35102237.

External links edit

  • Blood Amber Military resource grab clears out indigenous peoples in Kachin State’s Hugawng Valley Kachin Development Networking Group

burmese, amber, also, known, myanmar, amber, burmite, kachin, amber, amber, from, hukawng, valley, northern, myanmar, amber, dated, around, million, years, during, latest, albian, earliest, cenomanian, ages, cretaceous, period, amber, significant, palaeontolog. Burmese amber also known as Myanmar amber 1 Burmite or Kachin amber is amber from the Hukawng Valley in northern Myanmar The amber is dated to around 100 million years ago during the latest Albian to earliest Cenomanian ages of the mid Cretaceous period The amber is of significant palaeontological interest due to the diversity of flora and fauna contained as inclusions particularly arthropods including insects and arachnids but also birds lizards snakes frogs and fragmentary dinosaur remains The amber has been known and commercially exploited since the first century AD and has been known to science since the mid nineteenth century Research on the deposit has attracted controversy due to its alleged role in funding internal conflict in Myanmar and hazardous working conditions in the mines where it is collected Wing of the dragonfly Burmalindenia in a cabochon of Burmese amber showing typical red colouration of the amber Scale bar 5mm Contents 1 Geological context depositional environment and age 2 Paleoenvironment 3 Fauna and flora 3 1 Invertebrates 3 1 1 Arachnids 3 1 1 1 Araneae 3 1 1 2 Acariformes 3 1 1 3 Opiliones 3 1 1 4 Pseudoscorpiones 3 1 1 5 Scorpiones 3 1 1 6 Parasitiformes 3 1 1 7 Schizomida 3 1 1 8 Palpigradi 3 1 1 9 Amblypygi 3 1 1 10 Solfugae 3 1 1 11 Thelyphonida 3 1 1 12 Ricinulei 3 1 2 Myriapoda 3 1 3 Entognatha 3 1 4 Insects 3 1 4 1 Archaeognatha 3 1 4 2 Zygentoma 3 1 4 3 Ephemeroptera 3 1 4 4 Odonata 3 1 4 5 Hymenopterans 3 1 4 6 Dipterans 3 1 4 7 Coleopterans 3 1 4 8 Neuroptera 3 1 4 9 Hemiptera 3 1 4 10 Dictyoptera 3 1 4 11 Mecoptera 3 1 4 12 Psocoptera 3 1 4 13 Orthoptera 3 1 4 14 Trichoptera 3 1 4 15 Dermaptera 3 1 4 16 Embioptera 3 1 4 17 Grylloblattida 3 1 4 18 Strepsiptera 3 1 4 19 Lepidoptera 3 1 4 20 Megaloptera 3 1 4 21 Phasmatodea 3 1 4 22 Thysanoptera 3 1 4 23 Plecoptera 3 1 4 24 Raphidioptera 3 1 4 25 Chresmodidae 3 1 4 26 Tarachoptera 3 1 4 27 Permopsocida 3 1 4 28 Zoraptera 3 1 5 Nematoda 3 1 6 Nematomorpha 3 1 7 Mollusca 3 2 Vertebrates 3 3 Flora 3 3 1 Angiosperms 3 3 2 Bryopsida 3 3 3 Jungermanniopsida 3 3 4 Pinophyta 3 3 5 Pteridopsida 3 4 Amoebozoa 3 4 1 Myxogastria 3 4 2 Dictyostelia 4 History 5 History of research 6 Modern exploitation and controversy 7 Other Myanmar ambers 7 1 Tilin amber 7 2 Hkamti amber 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeological context depositional environment and age edit nbsp Geological context of Burmese amber in northern MyanmarThe amber is found within the Hukawng Basin a large Cretaceous Cenozoic sedimentary basin within northern Myanmar The strata have undergone folding and faulting The Hukawng basin is part of the larger Myanmar Central Basin a N S orientated synclinal basin extending to the Gulf of Martaban to the south The basin is considered to be a part of the West Burma block a k a Burma Terrane which has a debated tectonic history it is considered to be associated with the concepts of the Cimmeria and Sibumasu terranes The block was part of Gondwana during at least the Early Paleozoic but the timing of rifting is very uncertain with estimates ranging from the Devonian to Early Cretaceous It is also disputed whether the block had accreted onto the Asian continental margin by the time of the amber deposition 2 Some members of the flora and fauna have Gondwanan affinities 3 while others have Laurasian affinities 4 A recent paleomagnetic reconstruction finds that the Burma Terrane formed an island land mass in the Tethys Ocean during the Mid Cretaceous at a latitude around 5 10 degrees south of the equator 5 At Noije Bum located on a ridge amber is found within fine grained clastic rocks typically medium to greyish green in colour resulting from the constituent grains being black yellow grey and light green The fine grained rocks are primarily fine to very fine grained sandstone with beds of silt and shale and laterally persistent thin 1 2 mm thick coal horizons Massive micritic limestone interbeds of 6 8 centimetre thickness often containing coalified plant material also occur This facies association is typically around 1 metre thick and typically thinly bedded and laminated Associated with the fine grained facies is a set of medium facies primarily consisting of medium to fine grained sandstones also containing thin beds of siltstone shale and conglomerate alongside a persistent conglomerate horizon A specimen of the ammonite Mortoniceras has been found in a sandstone bed 2 metres above the amber horizon alongside indeterminate gastropods and bivalves 6 Lead uranium dating of zircon crystals of volcanic clasts within the amber bearing horizons has given a maximum age of 98 79 0 62 million years ago Ma making the deposit earliest Cenomanian in age 7 Unpublished data by Wang Bo on other layers suggests an age range of deposition of at least 5 million years 8 The amber does not appear to have undergone significant transport since hardening or be redeposited The strata at the site are younging upwards striking north north east and dipping 50 70 degrees E and SE north of the ridge and striking between south south east and south east and dipping 35 60 degrees south west south of the ridge suggesting the site is on the northwest limb of a syncline plunging to the northeast A minor fault with a conspicuous gouge zone was noted as present though it appeared to have no significant displacement 6 Several other localities are known including the colonial Khanjamaw and the more recent Inzutzut Angbamo and Xipiugong sites within the vicinity of Tanai The Hkamti site SW of the Hukawng basin has been determined to be significantly older dating to the early Albian around ca 110 Ma and is therefore considered distinct 9 Paleoenvironment edit nbsp A Puzosia Bhimaites species juvenile shell in Burmese amberThe Burmese amber paleoforest is considered to have been a tropical rainforest situated near the coast where resin was subsequently transported into a shallow marine environment The shell of a dead juvenile Puzosia Bhimaites ammonite four marine gastropod shells including Mathilda and littoral or supralittoral isopods entombed in a piece of amber with shell sand 10 along with growth of Isocrinid crinoids corals and oysters on the surface of some amber pieces indicate marine conditions for final deposition 11 Additionally pholadid piddock bivalve borings into amber specimens along with at least one pholadid which became trapped was interpreted to show that the resin was still fresh and unhardened when it was being moved into the tidal areas 12 However the phloladids in question belonging to the extinct genus Palaeolignopholas were later interpreted as a freshwater species and the presence of numerous freshwater insects suggests that the initial environment of deposition was a downstream estuarine to freshwater section of a river with the forests extending across coastal rivers river deltas lakes lagoons and coastal bays 13 The forest environment may have been prone to fire similar to modern tropical peat swamps based on the presence of fire adapted plants and burned plant remains found in the amber 14 The amber itself is primarily disc shaped and flattened along the bedding plane and is typically reddish brown with the colour ranging from shades of yellow to red The opacity of the amber ranges from clear to opaque Many amber pieces have thin calcite veins that are typically less than 1 mm 0 04 in but up to 4 5 mm 0 16 0 20 in thick The number and proportion of veins in a piece of amber varies significantly in some pieces veins are virtually absent while others are described as being packed with veinlets 6 The amber is considered to be of coniferous origin with a likely araucarian source tree based on spectroscopic analysis and wood fragment inclusions 15 though a pine origin has also been suggested 16 Fauna and flora editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The list of taxa is extraordinarily diverse with over 42 classes 108 orders 569 families 1017 genera and 1379 species described as of the end of 2019 with over 300 species described in 2019 alone the vast majority 94 of which are arthropods A complete list of taxa up until the end of 2018 can be found in Ross 2018 17 And a supplement covering most of 2019 can be found in Ross 2019b 18 For the sake of brevity a complete list of taxa is not given here and the classification is mostly at family level For a more complete list of taxa see Paleobiota of Burmese amber Invertebrates edit Well over 1000 species of invertebrates are known from the deposit including notably the oldest members of Palpigradi Electrokoenenia 19 and Schizomida Mesozomus 20 the oldest peripatid Velvet worm Cretoperipatus 21 and the only known fossil members of Mesothelae and Ricinulei since the Paleozoic Chimerarachne is a unique stem spider still possessing a tail with similar forms only known from the Paleozoic Arachnids edit Araneae edit Forty four families of spiders are known from the Burmese amber including Archaeidae Burmadictynidae Burmascutidae Burmathelidae Clubionidae Corinnidae Cretaceothelidae Deinopidae Dipluridae Eopsilodercidae Fossilcalcaridae Hersiliidae Hexathelidae Lagonomegopidae Leptonetidae Liphistiidae Micropalpimanidae Mongolarachnidae Mysmenidae Ochyroceratidae Oecobiidae Oonopidae Oxyopidae Palpimanidae Parvithelidae Pholcidae Pholcochyroceridae Plumorsolidae Praearaneidae Praeterleptonetidae Psechridae Psilodercidae Salticidae Segestriidae Telemidae Tetrablemmidae Tetragnathidae Theridiosomatidae Theridiidae Thomisidae Uloboridae and Vetiaroridae Acariformes edit nbsp Immensmaris chewbaccei Acariformes Smarididae Twenty families of acariformes are known from the Burmese amber including Anystidae Archaeorchestidae Bdellidae Caeculidae Cheyletidae Enantioppiidae Eremaeidae Erythraeidae Eupodidae Gymnodamaeidae Malaconothridae Microtrombidiidae Neoliodidae Oribatellidae Oribotritiidae Resinacaridae Smarididae Trombellidae Trombidiidae and Tuckerellidae Opiliones edit Nine families of opiliones are known from the Burmese amber including Beloniscidae Epedanidae Halithersidae Mesokanidae Monooculricinuleidae Pyramidopidae Sclerosomatidae Stylocellidae and Tithaeidae Pseudoscorpiones edit nbsp Procheiridium judsoni Pseudoscorpiones Cheiridiidae Twelve families of pseudoscorpions are known from the Burmese amber including Atemnidae Cheiridiidae Cheliferidae Chernetidae Chthoniidae Feaellidae Garypinidae Hyidae Ideoroncidae Neobisiidae Pseudocheiridiidae and Withiidae Scorpiones edit nbsp Betaburmesebuthus bellus Scorpiones Palaeoburmesebuthidae Seven families of scorpions are known from the Burmese amber including Buthidae Chaerilidae Chaerilobuthidae Palaeoburmesebuthidae Palaeoeuscorpiidae Palaeotrilineatidae and Sucinolourencoidae Parasitiformes edit Seven families of parasitiformes are known from the Burmese amber including Argasidae Deinocrotonidae Khimairidae Ixodidae Opilioacaridae Polyaspididae and Sejidae Schizomida edit One family of schizomida is known from the Burmese amber Hubbardiidae Palpigradi edit One genus of palpigradi is known Electrokoenenia which belongs to Eukoeneniidae Amblypygi edit Two genera of Amblypygi are known Kronocharon and Burmacharon which do not belong to any extant family Solfugae edit One genus of camel spider is known Cushingia which does not belong to any extant family Thelyphonida edit Two genera of whip scorpion are known Mesothelyphonus which belongs to Thelyphonidae and Burmathelyphonia which does not belong to any extant family Ricinulei edit Three genera of Ricinulei are known Hirsutisoma Poliochera an otherwise Carboniferous taxon and Primoricinuleus none of which belong to extant families Myriapoda edit nbsp Burmanopetalum inexpectatum Callipodida Sixteen families of Myriapods are known including Anthroleucosomatidae Electrocambalidae Tingupidae Glomeridellidae Andrognathidae Paradoxosomatidae Polydesmidae Polyxenidae Synxenidae Polyzoniidae Siphoniulidae Siphonophoridae Siphonorhinidae Zephroniidae Cambalidae Scolopendrellidae and Burmanopetalidae Entognatha edit Eight families of Entognathans are known including Campodeidae Japygidae Isotomidae Praentomobryidae Tomoceridae Neanuridae Odontellidae and Sminthuridae Insects edit Main article Insect paleobiota of Burmese amber Archaeognatha edit Two families of archaeognathans are known from the Burmese amber Machilidae and Meinertellidae Zygentoma edit One family of Zygentoman is known Lepismatidae Ephemeroptera edit nbsp Vetuformosa buckleyi Ephemeroptera Seven families of mayfly are known Australiphemeridae Baetidae Ephemeridae Heptageniidae Hexagenitidae Isonychiidae Prosopistomatidae Odonata edit Twenty families of odonatan are known from the Burmese amber including Aeshnidae Araripegomphidae Burmacoenagrionidae Burmaeshnidae Burmagomphidae Burmaphlebiidae Calopterygidae Coenagrionidae Dysagrionidae Gomphaeschnidae Gomphidae Hemiphlebiidae Libellulidae Lindeniidae Megapodagrionidae Mesomegaloprepidae Paracoryphagrionidae Perilestidae Platycnemididae Platystictidae Hymenopterans edit Main article Hymenoptera paleobiota of Burmese amber nbsp Diversinitus attenboroughi Hymenoptera Diversinitidae Over fifty families of hymenopterans have been described beginning with the papers of Cockerell who described a group of Bethylidae and Aulacidae species between 1917 and 1920 The monotypic family Melittosphecidae is only known from the Burmese amber species Melittosphex burmensis and eight species belonging to Aptenoperissus of the monotypic family Aptenoperissidae are also known Originally described as an Aneuretinae ant Burmomyrma rossi was moved to the extinct Chrysidoidea family Falsiformicidae 22 A number of Formicidae species known belonging to Baikuris indet Camelomecia janovitzi Ceratomyrmex ellenbergeri 11 species of Gerontoformica 3 species of Haidomyrmex Linguamyrmex vladi 2 species of Zigrasimecia Dhagnathos autokrator Chonidris insolita Aquilomyrmex huangi Protoceratomyrmex revelatus and Linguamyrmex brevicornis Other families include Ampulicidae Braconidae Cephidae Ceraphronidae Chalcididae Chrysididae Crabronidae Diapriidae Dryinidae Embolemidae Evaniidae Gasteruptiidae Geoscelionidae Heloridae Ichneumonidae Megalyridae Megaspilidae Mymaridae Mymarommatidae Pelecinidae Platygastridae Rhopalosomatidae Rotoitidae Sapygidae Scelionidae Sclerogibbidae Scolebythidae Sepulcidae Sierolomorphidae Siricidae Sparasionidae Sphecidae Stephanidae Tiphiidae Vespidae Xiphydriidae Angarosphecidae Aptenoperissidae Bryopompilidae Burmorussidae Burmusculidae Chrysobythidae Dipterommatidae Diversinitidae Falsiformicidae Gallorommatidae Ohlhoffiidae Panguidae Plumalexiidae Maimetshidae Myanmarinidae Othniodellithidae Peleserphidae Praeaulacidae Proterosceliopsidae Serphitidae Spathiopterygidae Syspastoxyelidae and several incertae sedis taxa nbsp Bamara groehni Diptera Psychodidae Dipterans edit Over forty families of dipterans are known from the Burmese amber including Acroceridae Anisopodidae Apsilocephalidae Apystomyiidae Asilidae Atelestidae Blephariceridae Bombyliidae Cecidomyiidae Ceratopogonidae Chaoboridae Chironomidae Corethrellidae Culicidae Diadocidiidae Dolichopodidae Empididae Hybotidae Ironomyiidae Keroplatidae Limoniidae Lygistorrhinidae Mycetophilidae Mythicomyiidae Nemestrinidae Phoridae Pipunculidae Platypezidae Psychodidae Ptychopteridae Rachiceridae Rhagionidae Scatopsidae Sciaridae Stratiomyidae Tabanidae Tanyderidae Tipulidae Valeseguyidae Xylomyidae Archizelmiridae Chimeromyiidae Eremochaetidae Eucaudomyiidae Mysteromyiidae Rhagionemestriidae Tethepomyiidae Zhangsolvidae and several incertae sedis taxa Coleopterans edit nbsp Electroxyra Coleoptera Cyclaxyridae Main article Coleoptera paleobiota of Burmese amber Over ninety families of coleopterans are known from the Burmese amber including Aderidae Anthicidae Anthribidae Apotomouridae Belidae Boganiidae Bostrichidae Brachypsectridae Buprestidae Cantharidae Carabidae Caridae Cerambycidae Cerophytidae Cerylonidae Chrysomelidae Ciidae Clambidae Cleridae Cucujidae Cupedidae Curculionidae Cyclaxyridae Dascillidae Dermestidae Dytiscidae Elateridae Elmidae Endomychidae Eucinetidae Eucnemidae Geotrupidae Glaresidae Gyrinidae Heteroceridae Histeridae Hybosoridae Hydraenidae Hydrophilidae Jacobsoniidae Kateretidae Laemophloeidae Lampyridae Latridiidae Leiodidae Lepiceridae Lucanidae Lycidae Lymexylidae Melandryidae Meloidae Melyridae Mesophyletidae Micromalthidae Monotomidae Mordellidae Mysteriomorphidae Nemonychidae Nitidulidae Oedemeridae Ommatidae Passalidae Parandrexidae Passalopalpidae Passandridae Phloeostichidae Prostomidae Psephenidae Ptiliidae Ptinidae Ptilodactylidae Ripiphoridae Salpingidae Scarabaeidae Scirtidae Scraptiidae Silphidae Silvanidae Smicripidae Sphaeriusidae Staphylinidae Tenebrionidae Tetratomidae Thanerocleridae Throscidae Trogidae Trogossitidae and Zopheridae nbsp Parababinskaia Neuroptera Babinskaiidae Neuroptera edit Over twenty families of neuropterans are known from the Burmese amber including Araripeneuridae Ascalaphidae Babinskaiidae Berothidae Chrysopidae Coniopterygidae Corydasialidae Dilaridae Dipteromantispidae Hemerobiidae Ithonidae Kalligrammatidae Mantispidae Mesochrysopidae Myrmeleontidae Nemopteridae Nevrorthidae Nymphidae Osmylidae Psychopsidae Rachiberothidae Sisyridae and several incertae sedis taxa Hemiptera edit nbsp Mimaplax ekrypsan Hemiptera Mimarachnidae Over sixty families of hemipterans are known from the Burmese amber including Achilidae Albicoccidae Aleyrodidae Aphrophoridae Aradidae Berstidae Burmacoccidae Burmitaphidae Callaphididae Cercopidae Cicadellidae Cicadidae Cimicidae Cixiidae Coccidae Coreidae Cydnidae Dictyopharidae Dinglidae Dipsocoridae Dorytocidae Enicocephalidae Fulgoridae Gelastocoridae Gerridae Hodgsonicoccidae Hydrometridae Issidae Jubisentidae Juraphididae Katlasidae Kinnaridae Kozariidae Lalacidae Leptopodidae Liadopsyllidae Macrodrilidae Margarodidae Matsucoccidae Mimarachnidae Minlagerrontidae Miridae Monophlebidae Naucoridae Nabidae Neazoniidae Ochteridae Ortheziidae Palaeoleptidae Parvaverrucosidae Perforissidae Protopsyllidiidae Procercopidae Pseudococcidae Reduviidae Schizopteridae Sinoalidae Tajmyraphididae Tettigarctidae Tingidae Tropiduchidae Velocipedidae Veliidae Weitschatidae Xylococcidae Yetkhatidae Yuripopovinidae and several incertae sedis taxa such as Mesophthirus formerly believed to be an ectoparasite but since determined to be a basal scale insect 23 Dictyoptera edit Twenty one families of dictyopterans are known from the Burmese amber including Blaberidae Blattulidae Blattidae Caloblattinidae Corydiidae Ectobiidae Olidae Liberiblattinidae Alienopteridae Manipulatoridae Umenocoleidae Nocticolidae Pabuonqedidae Termites Archeorhinotermitidae Hodotermitidae Stolotermitidae Termitidae and Mastotermitidae and mantid Burmantis Mecoptera edit Six families of mecopteran are known including Bittacidae Eomeropidae Meropeidae Orthophlebiidae Pseudopolycentropodidae and Aneuretopsychidae nbsp Burmacompsocus Psocoptera Compsocidae Psocoptera edit Ten families of psocopteran are known including Archaeatropidae Compsocidae Cormopsocidae Empheriidae Liposcelididae Manicapsocidae Pachytroctidae Prionoglarididae Psyllipsocidae Sphaeropsocidae and Trogiidae Orthoptera edit Seven families of orthopteran are known including Elcanidae Gryllidae Mogoplistidae Ripipterygidae Tetrigidae Tettigoniidae and Tridactylidae Trichoptera edit Eight families of trichopteran are known including Calamoceratidae Dysoneuridae Helicopsychidae Hydroptilidae Odontoceridae Philopotamidae Polycentropodidae and Psychomyiidae Dermaptera edit nbsp Astreptolabis laevis Dermaptera Pygidicranidae Five families of dermapteran are known including Anisolabididae Diplatyidae Labiduridae and Pygidicranidae Embioptera edit Four families of embiopteran are known including Clothodidae Oligotomidae Notoligotomidae and Sorellembiidae Grylloblattida edit One family of grylloblattidan a possibly polyphyletic group of insects suggested to be closely related to Notoptera Aristoviidae is known containing the single genus Aristovia 24 A grylloblattidan nymph Sylvalitoralis cheni is also known but is not assigned to any family 25 nbsp Heterobathmilla kakopoios Strepsiptera Phthanoxenidae Strepsiptera edit Two families of strepsipteran are known Cretostylopidae and Phthanoxenidae Lepidoptera edit Six families of lepidopteran are known including Agathiphagidae Douglasiidae Gelechiidae Gracillariidae Lophocoronidae and Micropterigidae Megaloptera edit One species of megalopteran is known Haplosialodes liui of the family Sialidae Phasmatodea edit Four families of phasmatodean are known Archipseudophasmatidae Phasmatidae Pterophasmatidae and Timematidae nbsp Rohrthrips jiewenaeThysanoptera edit Five families of thrips are known including Aeolothripidae Melanthripidae Rohrthripidae Thripidae and Stenurothripidae nbsp Largusoperla billwymani a member of PlecopteraPlecoptera edit Two families of stoneflies are known Perlidae and Petroperlidae Raphidioptera edit nbsp Nanoraphidia Raphidioptera Mesoraphidiidae One family of Raphidiopteran is known Mesoraphidiidae Chresmodidae edit A species of the enigmatic long legged chresmodid insect Chresmoda is known 26 Tarachoptera edit One family of Tarachopteran is known Tarachocelidae Permopsocida editOne family of Permopsocidan is known Archipsyllidae nbsp Zorotypus pectenZoraptera edit Multiple species of Zorotypus and the monotypic genus Xenozorotypus are known Nematoda edit Five families of nematodes are known including Cosmocercidae Heterorhabditidae Mermithidae Thelastomatidae Aphelenchoididae Nematomorpha edit One genus of nematomorph is known Cretachordodes Chordodidae Gordioidea Mollusca edit nbsp Shell of Archaeocyclotus a member of CyclophoridaeAside from the previously mentioned ammonites and marine gastropod shells Seven families of terrestrial gastropod are known Diplommatinidae Pupinidae Achatinidae Punctidae Valloniidae Assimineidae and Cyclophoridae 27 28 29 nbsp Holotype specimen of frog ElectroranaVertebrates edit While the deposit is well known for invertebrate inclusions some vertebrate inclusions have been found as well One of the more notable discoveries was a well preserved theropod dinosaur tail with preserved feathers 30 As well as fossils of enantiornithine birds including juveniles 31 32 and partial wings and preserved feet 33 34 35 36 including a diagnostic taxon Elektorornis 37 A complete skull of the lizard Oculudentavis is known 38 Electrorana is a well preserved frog known from the amber 39 Other notable specimens include an embryonic snake 40 Several specimens of lizard have been described from the deposit 41 including a gecko with preserved toe pads Cretaceogekko 42 and a miniaturised 2 cm long possible stem anguimorph Barlochersaurus 43 One of the lizard specimens was initially described to be a chamaeleonid actually turned out to be an albanerpetontid amphibian 44 This was described in 2020 as the new genus and species Yaksha perettii 45 nbsp Radula cretaceaFlora edit Angiosperms edit Eleven species of Angiosperm are known in nine genera including members of Cornaceae Cunoniaceae Lauraceae Monimiaceae and Laurales incertae sedis Poales incertae sedis and Angiosperm incertae sedis Bryopsida edit Two genera of Bryopsida in the separate orders Dicranales and Hypnodendrales Jungermanniopsida edit Three families of Jungermanniopsida are known Frullaniaceae Lepidolaeanaceae Radulaceae nbsp Cystodium sorbifolioidesPinophyta edit Two families of Pinopsida are known Araucariaceae and Cupressaceae including Metasequoia Pteridopsida edit Five families of Pteridopsidan are known Cystodiaceae Dennstaedtiaceae Lindsaeaceae Pteridaceae Thyrsopteridaceae and several genera of Polypodiales incertae sedis Amoebozoa edit Myxogastria edit Sporocarps of extant myxogastrid slime mould genus Stemonitis are known 46 Dictyostelia edit A possible dictyostelid Paleoplastes burmanica has been described 47 History editThe amber is apparently referred to in ancient Chinese sources as originating from Yunnan Province as early as the first century AD according to the Book of the Later Han and trade with China had been ongoing for centuries This has been confirmed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy FTIR analysis of amber artifacts from the Eastern Han Dynasty 25 220 CE 48 It was first mentioned in European sources by the Jesuit Priest Alvaro Semedo who visited China in 1613 it was described as being digged out of mines and sometimes in great pieces it is redder than our amber though not so cleane 49 The locality itself has been known to European explorers since the 1800s with visitation to the Hukawng Valley by Simon Fraser Hannay in 1836 1837 50 51 At that time the principle products of the valley mines were salt gold and amber with the majority of gold and amber being bought by Chinese traders Hannay visited the amber mines themselves on March 21 1836 and he noted that the last three miles to the mines were marked with numerous abandoned pits up to 15 ft 4 6 m in depth where amber had been dug in the past The mining had moved over the hill to a series of 10 pits but no visible amber was seen suggesting that miners possibly hid the amber found that day before the party arrived Mining was being performed manually at the time through the use of sharpened bamboo rods and small wooden shovels Finer pieces of amber were recovered from the deeper pits with clear yellow being recovered from depths of 40 ft 12 m The recovered amber was bought with silver or often exchanged for jackets hats copper pots or opium among other goods mixed and lower quality amber was sold from around 1 ticals to 4 rupees per seer Pieces that were considered high quality or fit for use as ornamentation were described as expensive and price varied depending on the clarity and color of the amber Women of the valley were noted to wear amber earrings as part of their jewelry 50 In 1885 the Konbaung dynasty was annexed to the British Raj and a survey of the area was conducted by Dr Fritz Noetling on behalf of the Geological Survey of India 49 The final research before Burmese independence in 1947 was conducted by Dr H L Chhibber in 1934 who provided the most detailed description of Burmite occurrences 49 History of research editWhile a 1892 study considered the amber likely to be Miocene in age a study by Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell in 1916 noted archaic nature of the insects and concluded that the amber must be older and possibly as old as the Late Cretaceous Various later authors during the mid late 20th century suggested either a Paleocene Eocene or an Late Cretaceous age A Cretaceous age was confirmed during the early 2000s 49 While during the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century research on the deposit was low intensity during the mid 2010s there was a great increase number of papers published on the deposit numbering hundreds every year with a plurality coming from Chinese researchers 52 Modern exploitation and controversy editSee also Kachin conflict and Internal conflict in Myanmar nbsp Miners digging and sorting Burmese amber at Noije Bum in the Hukawng Valley undated photographLeeward Capital Corp a small Canadian mining firm controlled the deposit from the mid 1990s to c 2000 though the history of exploitation during the 2000s is obscure The Kachin Independence Army KIA an armed rebel group seeking to secede Kachin province from Myanmar controlled the area during the early to mid 2010 s During the early 2010s production rapidly increased The working conditions at the mines have been described as extremely unsafe down 100 m 330 ft deep pits barely wide enough to crawl through with no accident compensation 8 The KIA controlled amber export via numerous licenses taxes restrictions on movement of labor and enforced auctions 53 The main amber market in Myanmar is Myitkyina Most amber is smuggled into China primarily for jewelry with estimates of around 100 tonnes passing through to the main market of Tengchong Yunnan in 2015 with an estimated value between five and seven billion yuan Burmese amber was estimated to make up 30 of Tenchong s gemstone market the rest being Myanmar Jade and was declared one of the city s eight main industries by the local government 54 The presence of calcite veins are a major factor in determining the gem quality of pieces with pieces with a large number of veins having significantly lower value 6 In June 2017 the Tatmadaw seized control of the mines from the KIA 55 Sales of amber were alleged to help fund the Kachin conflict by various news organisations in 2019 56 57 Interest in this discussion rose in March 2020 after the highly publicised description of Oculudentavis which made the cover of Nature 58 On April 21 2020 the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology SVP published a letter of recommendation to journal editors asking for a moratorium on publication for any fossil specimens purchased from sources in Myanmar after June 2017 when the Myanmar military began its campaign to seize control of the amber mining 59 On April 23 2020 Acta Palaeontologica Polonica stated that it would not accept papers on Burmese amber material collected from 2017 onwards after the Burmese military took control of the deposit requiring certification or other demonstrable evidence that they were acquired before the date both legally and ethically 60 On May 13 2020 the Journal of Systematic Palaeontology published an editorial stating that it would no longer consider papers based whole or in part on Burmese amber material regardless of whether in historic collections or not 61 On 30 June 2020 a statement from the International Palaeoentomological Society was published in response to the SVP criticising the proposal to ban publishing on Burmese amber material 62 In August 2020 a comment from over 50 authors was published in PalZ responding to the SVP statement The authors disagreed with the proposal of a moratorium describing the focus on the Burmese amber as arbitrary and that The SVP s recommendation for a moratorium on Burmese amber affects fossil non vertebrate research much more than fossil vertebrate research and clearly does not represent this part of the palaeontological community 63 The conclusion that Burmese amber funded the Tatmadaw was disputed by George Poinar and Sieghard Ellenberger who found that the supply of amber collapsed after the 2017 takeover of the mines by the Tatmadaw and that most of the current circulation of amber in Chinese markets was extracted prior to 2017 64 A story in Science in 2019 stated Two former mine owners speaking through an interpreter in phone interviews say taxes have been even steeper since government troops took control of the area Both shut their mines when they became unprofitable after the government takeover and almost all deep mines are now out of business dealers here corroborate Only shallow mines and perhaps a few secret operations are still running 8 There were around 200 000 miners working in the Hukawng valley mines prior to the takeover by the Tatmadaw which shrunk to 20 000 or less after the military operations 53 Adolf Peretti a gemologist who owns a museum with Burmese amber specimens noted that the 2017 cutoff suggested by the SVP does not take into account that the export of Burmese amber prior to 2017 was also funding internal conflict in Myanmar due to the control by the KIA 53 Much of the amber cutting since 2017 has been done in internally displaced person camps under humanitarian and non conflict conditions 53 Other Myanmar ambers editOther deposits of amber are known from several regions in Myanmar with noted deposits in the Shwebo District of the Sagaing Region from the Pakokku and Thayet districts of Magway Region and the Bago District of the Bago Region 65 51 Unlike the Hukawng deposit none of these sources have produced notable quantities of amber citation needed Tilin amber edit A 2018 study on an amber deposit from Tilin in central Myanmar indicated that deposit to be 27 million years younger than the Hukawng deposit dating to approximately 72 million years old placing it in the latest Campanian age The deposit was associated with an overlying tuffaceous layer and underlying nodules of brown sandstone yielded remains of the ammonite Sphenodiscus Within a number of arthropod specimens were described though much more poorly preserved than specimens in the Hukawng amber These include members of Hymenoptera Braconidae Diapriidae Scelionidae Diptera Ceratopogonidae Chironomidae Dictyoptera Blattaria Mantodea planthoppers Berothidae and bark lice Lepidopsocidae as well as extant ant subfamilies Dolichoderinae and tentatively Ponerinae as well as fragments of moss 66 Hkamti amber edit The Hkamti site is located ca 90 km southwest of the Angbamo site and predominantly consists of limestone interbedded with mudstone and tuff the amber is found within the unconsolidated mudstone tuff layers A crinoid was found attached to one amber specimen alongside marine plant remains in the surrounding sediment indicating deposition in a shallow marine setting The amber is generally red brown and yellow colouration is rare the amber is generally found as angular clasts indicating short transport distance and is more brittle than other northern Myanmar ambers Zircon dating has constrained the age of the deposit to the early Albian c 110 Ma significantly older than the dates obtained from other deposits Fauna found within the amber includes Archaeognatha Diplopoda Coleoptera Araneae Trichoptera Neuroptera Psocodea Isoptera Diptera Orthoptera Pseudoscorpionida Hymenoptera and Thysanoptera 9 A lizard Retinosaurus has also been described from the locality 67 See also edit nbsp Myanmar portalReferences edit Tong T Shih CK Ren D 2019 A new genus and species of Stenurothripidae Insecta Thysanoptera Terebrantia from mid Cretaceous Myanmar amber Cretaceous Research 100 184 191 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2019 03 005 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Metcalfe Ian June 2017 Tectonic evolution of Sundaland Bulletin of the Geological Society of Malaysia 63 27 60 doi 10 7186 bgsm63201702 Poinar George 2018 03 09 Burmese amber evidence of Gondwanan origin and Cretaceous dispersion Historical Biology 1 6 doi 10 1080 08912963 2018 1446531 ISSN 0891 2963 S2CID 90373037 Hinkelman Jan 2022 01 10 Mongolblatta sendii sp n Mesoblattinidae from North Myanmar amber links record to Laurasian sediments Palaeontographica Abteilung A 321 1 6 81 96 doi 10 1127 pala 2021 0105 ISSN 0375 0442 S2CID 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Capital of Ava to the Amber Mines of the Hukong valley in the South east frontier of Assam Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 64 248 278 a b Ross A Mellish C York P Craighton B 2010 Chapter 12 Burmese amber In Penney D ed Biodiversity of Fossils in Amber from the Major World Deposits Siri Scientific Press pp 116 136 ISBN 978 0 9558636 4 6 Research on amber from a war torn part of Myanmar is surging The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 2023 07 04 a b c d Peretti Adolf December 2021 An alternative perspective for acquisitions of amber from Myanmar including recommendations of the United Nations Human Rights Council Journal of International Humanitarian Action 6 1 12 doi 10 1186 s41018 021 00101 y ISSN 2364 3412 S2CID 235174183 Rippa Alessandro Yang Yi July 2017 The Amber Road Cross Border Trade and the Regulation of the Burmite Market in Tengchong Yunnan TRaNS Trans Regional and National Studies of Southeast Asia 5 2 243 267 doi 10 1017 trn 2017 7 ISSN 2051 364X Lawton Graham Blood amber The exquisite trove of fossils fuelling war in Myanmar New Scientist Retrieved 2020 02 04 Gammon Katharine The Human Cost of Amber The Atlantic ISSN 1072 7825 Retrieved 2020 02 04 Lawton Graham Military now controls Myanmar s scientifically important amber mines New Scientist Retrieved 2020 02 04 Joel Lucas 2020 03 11 Some Paleontologists Seek Halt to Myanmar Amber Fossil Research The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 03 13 Rayfield Emily J Theodor Jessica M Polly P David 2020 Fossils from conflict zones and reproducibility of fossil based scientific data Society for Vertebrate Paleontology pp 1 2 Archived from the original on 2021 01 26 Retrieved 2020 04 28 News Acta Palaeontologica Polonica www app pan pl Retrieved 2020 05 19 Barrett Paul M Johanson Zerina 2020 05 13 Editorial Myanmar Burmese Amber Statement Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 1 doi 10 1080 14772019 2020 1764313 ISSN 1477 2019 Szwedo Jacek Wang Bo Soszynska Maj Agnieszka Azar Dany Ross Andrew J 2020 06 30 International Palaeoentomological Society Statement Palaeoentomology 3 3 221 222 doi 10 11646 palaeoentomology 3 3 1 ISSN 2624 2834 Haug Joachim T Azar Dany et al September 2020 Comment on the letter of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology SVP dated April 21 2020 regarding Fossils from conflict zones and reproducibility of fossil based scientific data Myanmar amber PalZ 94 3 431 437 doi 10 1007 s12542 020 00524 9 hdl 2445 175747 ISSN 0031 0220 Poinar George Ellenberger Sieghard April 2020 Burmese Amber Fossils Mining Sales and Profits Geoconservation Research 3 1 doi 10 30486 gcr 2020 1900981 1018 Zherikhin V V Ross A J 2000 A review of the history geology and age of Burmese amber burmite Bulletin of the Natural History Museum Geology Series Zheng D Chang S C Perrichot V Dutta S Rudra A Mu L Kelly R S Li S Zhang Q Zhang Q Wong J December 2018 A Late Cretaceous amber biota from central Myanmar Nature Communications 9 1 3170 Bibcode 2018NatCo 9 3170Z doi 10 1038 s41467 018 05650 2 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 6085374 PMID 30093646 Cernansky Andrej Stanley Edward L Daza Juan D Bolet Arnau Arias J Salvador Bauer Aaron M Vidal Garcia Marta Bevitt Joseph J Peretti Adolf M Aung Nyi Nyi Evans Susan E 2022 01 31 A new Early Cretaceous lizard in Myanmar amber with exceptionally preserved integument Scientific Reports 12 1 1660 Bibcode 2022NatSR 12 1660C doi 10 1038 s41598 022 05735 5 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 8803969 PMID 35102237 External links editBlood Amber Military resource grab clears out indigenous peoples in Kachin State s Hugawng Valley Kachin Development Networking Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burmese amber amp oldid 1213385274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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