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{{short description|Creationist term for a fossil that extends through more than one geological stratum}}
{{Creationism sidebar}}
[[File:Lycopsid joggins mcr1.JPG|thumb|Ancient ''in situ'' [[w:lycopsid|lycopsid]], probably [[w:Sigillaria|''Sigillaria'']], with attached [[w:stigmaria|stigmarian roots]]. Specimen is from the Joggins Formation ([[Pennsylvanian (geology)|Pennsylvanian]]), Cumberland Basin, Nova Scotia.]]
[[Image:Stigmaria Bear Valley upright.jpg|thumb|Upright ''[[Sigillaria]]'' in dipping beds of [[Pennsylvanian (geology)|Pennsylvanian]] [[Llewellyn Formation]] in [[Bear Valley Strip Mine]], [[Northumberland County, Pennsylvania]]]]
A '''polystrate fossil''' is a [[fossil]] of a single organism (such as a [[tree trunk]]) that extends through more than one geological [[stratum]].<ref name="MacRae1997a">MacRae, A., 1997, [http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/polystrate/trees.html ''"Polystrate" Tree Fossils'']. [http://www.talkorigins.org/ TalkOrigins Archive.]</ref> The word ''polystrate'' is not a standard [[Geology|geological]] term. This term is typically found in [[creationist]] publications.<ref name="MacRae1997a"/><ref name="Gastaldo+1999a">Gastaldo, R.A. 1999. ''Debates on Autochthonous and Allochthonous Origin of Coal: Empirical Science versus the Diluvialists,'' In Manger, W.L., ed., The Evolution-Creation Controversy II: Perspectives on Science, Religion, and Geological Education, The Paleontological Society Papers, v. 5, p. 135-167.</ref>
This term is typically applied to "fossil forests" of upright [[Petrified wood|fossil tree trunks]] and stumps that have been found worldwide, i.e. in the
==Geological explanation==
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Geologists have recognized innumerable fossil soils ([[paleosol]]s) throughout the strata containing upright fossils at Joggins in Nova Scotia, in the Yellowstone petrified forests, in the coal mines of the [[Black Warrior Basin]] of [[Alabama]], and at many other locations. The layer immediately underlying [[coal seam]]s, often called either "[[seatearth]]" or "[[underclay]]", typically either consists of or contains a paleosol. Paleosols are soils which were formed by [[subaerial]] [[weathering]] during periods of very slow or no accumulation of sediments. Later, renewed sedimentation buried these soils to create paleosols. These paleosols are identified on the basis of the presence of structures and microstructures unique to soils; animal burrows and molds of plant roots of various sizes and types; recognizable soil-profile development; and alteration of minerals by soil processes. In many cases, these paleosols are virtually identical to modern soils.
Geologists, who have
===Formation by regeneration===
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===Formation by Carboniferous deglacial meltwater-pulses===
In addition, part of the Carboniferous Period was a period of extensive and thick continental [[ice sheet]]s. During the Carboniferous ice age, the repeated [[Glacial period|glacial]] – [[interglacial]] cycles caused major changes in the thickness and extent of continental ice sheets. When these ice sheets expanded in extent and thickness, [[eustatic sea level]] typically fell by over
===Association with marine fossils===
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