Authors
Malvina Lak, Didier Néraudeau, André Nel, Peter Cloetens, Vincent Perrichot, Paul Tafforeau
Publication date
2008/6/1
Journal
Microscopy and microanalysis
Volume
14
Issue
3
Pages
251-259
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
A significant portion of Mesozoic amber is fully opaque. Biological inclusions in such amber are invisible even after polishing, leading to potential bias in paleoecological and phylogenetic studies. Until now, studies using conventional X-ray microtomography focused on translucent or semi-opaque amber. In these cases, organisms of interest were visualized prior to X-ray analyses. It was recently demonstrated that propagation phase contrast X-ray synchrotron imaging techniques are powerful tools to access invisible inclusions in fully opaque amber. Here we describe an optimized synchrotron microradiographic protocol that allowed us to investigate efficiently and rapidly large amounts of opaque amber pieces from Charentes (southwestern France). Amber pieces were imaged with microradiography after immersion in water, which optimizes the visibility of inclusions. Determination is not accurate enough to …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Lak, D Néraudeau, A Nel, P Cloetens, V Perrichot… - Microscopy and microanalysis, 2008