The Blanowice Formation recovers a deltaic section on the eastern
Bohemian Massif, where rivers come from the west, as proven by the
Carboniferous fossil matter found on the layers of the formation, moved from the west of the
Czech Republic, and deposited especially on the
Parkoszowice borehole. The Borehole was part of southeastern part of the Polish Basin that during the Early Jurassic, where developed a shallow paralic environment, with organic carbon buried in nearshore marine environments due to intensified erosion. The extracted samples were recovered at the
Wysoka Lelowska 47Ż borehole and
Jaworznik 124Ż borehole, with five core samples were taken from
Żarki 90Ż drill core, this last coming from a relatively large, ~ 1.5 m thickness, coal seam.
Vitrinite has local reflectance values of 0.49-0.56 %Ro. The
Cupressaceae and/or
Podocarpaceae families are considered the main peat-forming plant species (Due to the presence of phenolic
Abietanes and dehydroabietic acids). Later largers studies cover a really big influence of the fires on the region. After the
Toarcian Anoxic Event on the called "Kaszewy-1" (where the Toarcian makes ~150 m of the strata) the Wildfire activity was widely recorded. The Structure of the main depositional setting has been seen divided in 3 parts: on the center, near
Kaszewy Kościelne there was a major restricted brackish-marine basin, with seasonal influxes of marine water. The great abundance of Charcoal is the main indicator of the fire activity locally, but also the Polycyclic Aromatic
Hydrocarbons, whose abundance reflects an increase in wildfire activity. Coarse Charcoal particles abundance is low, while the fine Charcoal particles are more abundant on nearly all the measured samples, vinculated to small reductions of the Sea Level locally. The most abundant Polycyclic Hydrocarbon found locally is
Phenanthrene, and along the Charcoal data shows how the Fires locally increased around the Carbon Isotope Excursion on the Toarcian Anoxic Event Worldwide. Along this period, mostly of the strata of the region shows at least 6 periods of fire intensification, that are coeval to others found on
Yorkshire,
Wales and
Peniche.
Dinoflagellates On the Mrzygłód mine samples there is a domain of land-derived
Phytoclasts and
Palynomorphs, with abundance of the cyst
Nannoceratopsis, that is considered a euryhaline genus. High amount of terrestrial organic matter shows that there was an intense supply and accumulation of land-derived organic particles from surrounding land areas, what, along with the decrease of salinity conditions, thanks to the dinocysts conclude that the assemblage represents a part of the
Blanowice Formation deposited in a proximal area under brackish conditions, with possible changes on the range of salinity.
Palynology The
Blanowice Beds are distributed in area between
Częstochowa,
Dębnik,
Siewierz and
Olkusz in the Silesian - Cracow Monocline. The coals were mined there in the years 1818–1959. The major plant bearing strata is exposed at Kierszuła near
Poręba, where an identified spore-pollen assemblage comprises higher cryptogamic plants (
Bryopsida,
Selaginellopsida,
Sphenopsida,
Lycopsida,
Pteropsida) and the gymnospermous (
Pteridospermopsida,
Cycadopsida,
Bennettitales,
Ginkgoaceae,
Coniferopsida). The Pollen of coniferous plants has been seen as connected with the
Cheirolepidiaceae group, on an assemblage of herbaceous peat-bog vegetation, characterized by predominance of ferns, was most probably the parent material for that variety of coals. The presence of fairly thick laminae of
Vitrain in the Kierszuła middle layers indicates some phases with share of forest assemblage marked in area of contemporary peat-bog.
Fossil Wood The Blanowice Coals fossil wood from Zawiercie area were already described in 1917 as "Blanowicer Keuperholz", on the basis of specimens from the "Elka", "Kamilla" and "Zygmunt" coal pits, claimed to be xylologically similar, yet no taxon was named and the collection was not preserved. Based on recent revisions of the local flora, likely belong to
Agathoxylon.
Plant Remains Upper Pliensbachian strata on the
Zawiercie area (Upper Silesia) is the main source for the
Blanowice Formation Flora. Coal was mined locally during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Rutkowski (1923) found only three specimens of plants on waste heaps there, that where never properly described or illustrated, came from shale above the coal seam. Along with the Plant remains also noted plant detritus and coalified wood fragments. According to information from local miners, fossil plant specimens were discovered only rarely during coal extraction.
Fungi Ichnofossils Annelida Bivalvia == References ==