Click on the different pieces of amber to find out what is captured inside and what clues it provides about this ancient ecosystem.



Amber is a form of tree resin -- exuded as a protective mechanism against disease and insect infestation -- that has hardened and been preserved in the earth's crust for millions of years. Often regarded as a gem, amber is actually an organic substance whose structure has changed very little over time, unlike that of other fossilized material, in which organic matter is replaced with minerals.

Because amber oxidizes and degrades when exposed to oxygen, it is preserved only under special conditions. Thus it is almost always found in dense, wet sediments, such as clay and sand that formed at the bottom of an ancient lagoon or a river delta. While hundreds of amber deposits occur around the world, most of them contain only trace amounts of the substance; only about twenty deposits in the world contain amounts of amber large enough to be mined.

Amber has preserved ancient life to such infinitesimal detail that it even captures fragments of DNA of the organisms entrapped in it. Such a wide variety of creatures has been found in Dominican amber, for example, that scientists are able to reconstruct this ancient ecosystem with amazing intricacy.

Pictured above is one of the highlights of AMBER: Window to the Past -- a re-creation of a 23- to 30-million-year-old Dominican amber forest. Everything in this reconstruction derives from direct evidence provided by the amber fossils or is inferred on the basis of plant-feeding forms of insects, such as fig wasps, which specifically pollinate fig trees.


 


Exhibition Sponsors
AMBER: Window to the Past is generously supported by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ross and The Ambrose Monell Foundation. Additional support has been provided by Mr. Plato Malozemoff and Mr. Don Nelson. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.

 


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