Hi Wolfgang,
The photos were taken from a complete section of a fossilised tree fern, including bark (see posting in Macro/Close-Up Forum). It measures approximately 80mm in "diameter" and is about 6mm thick. Like fossilised wood all the original organic material has been replaced with minerals, mostly a form of quartz. the various colours are the result of impurities such as iron oxides (red) and manganese (orange and black). In this case a reasonable amount of microscopic detail has been preserved during the fossilisation process - this is not always the case.
In this instance examination is obviously only possible by reflected light. I have not come across sections of fossilised fern that are thin enough to view by transmitted light, but I'm sure they must exist. The equipment required to prepare the specimen so that maximum detail is visible is very large, very specialised and very expensive too.
The section is cut from the log using a very fine diamond tipped saw (typically 24" or 36" in diameter). The blade is continually lubricated with oil as the section is being cut - my guess is that it would have taken about 10 minutes to cut my piece.
The next stage is lapping and polishing to first create a optically smooth surface and then polish it to a high gloss sheen. This is an iterative process using progressively finer grades of diamond or ceramic powder and can take a considerable time (days sometimes) to complete depending upon the hardness of the mineral quartz and other inclusions. The larger the lapping plate the better (typically 2 to 3 feet in diameter).
All this requires a considerable amount of experience and skill to get it right as every log (wood, palm or tree fern) is different and requires careful management to avoid fracturing or fragmentation during the cutting stage and to judge the appropriate abrasive grit grades and timings of each stage in the lapping process.
Sadly I do not have these skills or the equipment (or the space to house it in) so must buy my pieces from others that possess both means and ability
I used a Meiji EMZ-5TR stereo microscope with duel fibre optic (halogen sourced) cold lights. Camera is an Olympus SP-350 with custom white balance, manual focus and CombineZM stacking of ~6 frames (in this instance). Post processing in Photoshop CS2.
Hope this helps.
Bruce