Fusain
Encyclopedia
Fusain is a fossilised carbon deposit, which - after some controversy - has been identified as fossilised charcoal.
It is fibrous, black and opaque, and often preserves details of cell wall architecture. Wood-derived fusain usually takes the form of cubic blocks, whereas fusain from other plant material may take the form of thin films which are only visible under a microscope where the surrounding rock is dissolved by acid maceration
Acid maceration
Acid maceration is a technique to extract organic microfossils from a surrounding rock matrix using acid.Hydrochloric acid or acetic acid may be used to extract phosphatic fossils, such as the small shelly fossils, from a carbonate matrix....

. The material is silky and crumbles on the touch.
The loss of volatile elements during combustion means that fusain fossils are usually smaller than the original organism, but this same factor makes them unlikely to be eaten by any animals (for they have no nutritional value), enhancing their preservation potential.

Fusain shows characteristics diagnostic of pyrolysis (i.e. 'burning') in modern material: the cell walls of xylem are homogenized, and subsequently crack along their middles.
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