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perminéralisation

Permineralisation (British English: permineralisation) is a form of fossilization in which mineral-rich groundwater or fluids infiltrate the porous parts of organic material and precipitate minerals within its tissues. The original material is often retained, and the result is a three-dimensional, mineral-filled replica that preserves fine internal details.

As groundwater flows through pores and voids, minerals such as silica (SiO2), calcite (CaCO3), apatite, or iron

Permineralisation typically occurs during diagenesis, sometimes early after burial, in environments with chemical-rich fluids and relatively

It is distinct from replacement, which dissolves the original material and substitutes another mineral entirely; permineralisation

Related variants include pyritization, where iron sulfide fills tissues under anoxic conditions. Permineralisation is one of

sulfides
(pyrite)
precipitate,
filling
spaces
and
reinforcing
the
structure.
The
process
can
preserve
microstructures
like
cell
walls,
vascular
tissue
in
wood,
or
bone
microarchitecture.
low
oxygen.
It
can
take
thousands
to
millions
of
years.
often
leaves
the
original
organic
framework
intact
while
filling
pores.
Classic
examples
include
petrified
wood
and
fossil
bones
where
silica,
calcite,
or
phosphate
has
permeated
the
tissue.
several
diagenetic
pathways
that
produce
fossil
preservation.