2002

Field Trips

January 12, 2002 - Cambrian Fossils, Cherokee Co, AL

We collected in Cherokee County, Alabama, in the pebbles and shaley outcrops around a lake, which was low for the winter, exposing a wide shoreline. An outcrop of the Middle Cambrian Conasauga Shale of the Coosa Valley is at this site, and numerous trilobites were found. A number of members went scouting for new sites in the area. The best find of the trip was a complete trilobite impression on a hard nodule.

(Photo courtesy Vicki Lais)


Trilobite found by Vicki.

February 23, 2002 - Franklin Co, AL

BPS members collected in the Bangor Limestone in Franklin County, Alabama, and made several stops at roadcuts in the area. Specimens from this site date to the late Mississipian Period of geological history (about 320 million years).

March 23, 2002 - Walker Co, AL

BPS members visited a private museum owned by one of our newest members - wonderful specimens, as he has worked around mines most of his life. Then we went to Taft Coal mine in Walker County, Alabama for collecting.

April 14, 2002 - Walker Co, AL

Once again, BPS members visited a coal mine in Walker County, Alabama, where many varieties of plant fossils were found.

April 26, 2002 - BPS Hosts Jerry MacDonald at Union Chapel Mine

This morning, Jerry MacDonald, who discovered the Robledo Mountain Paleozoic Trackways, and his wife, Pearl, met with various BPS members in Jasper in order to visit the Union Chapel Mine.  Jerry and Pearl visited the site twice, once before and once after lunch.  Unfortunately, the weather was rainy and none of the pictures taken of Jerry at the site worked out.  The pictures here were instead taken at Uncle Mort's Restaurant, located just east of downtown Jasper, and only a couple of miles from the Union Chapel Mine.  Later in the evening, a "slide party" was hosted for the MacDonald's at the Buta/Crocker residence in Tuscaloosa.

Photos taken by Ron Buta and others.

 

Image GalleriesField Trip Photos2002-04-26

May 24, 2002 - Lowndes Co, AL

BPS members spent the weekend of May 24-26 on a camping trip to a Lowndes County, Alabama, hunting club, to collect in creeks and gullies. We found crabs in nodules, ammonites, turritella, and had a great time! John brought his telescope, and we spent a long time just gazing at the stars at night, and joined the "next door neighbors" at their campfire.

June 13, 2002 - New Hanover Co, NC

Again this year, a number of BPS members visited several mines near Wilmington, North Carolina, the beach, and a shell pit a number of miles inland. We spent extra days there, from June 13 - 16. We found a good quantity of shark teeth and echinoids, and also found litterally thousands of shells.

Thanks to Ashley for setting up this multi-day excursion to a number of sites. It was a very interesting trip, and I hope the young student whom Ashley brought along contacts me sometime. Am very interested in how your life is going these days!

 

(Pictures courtesy Vicki Lais)


One of the quarries.


Most of the gang.


Ken diligently searching the shell piles.


Martha and her bucket of treasures.


Shell piles dug up while digging the canals seen in the picture. This is about 50 miles inland.


Vicki and some of her treasures.

July 27, 2002 - Marshall Co, AL

This month, BPS members were given a private tour of Cathedral Caverns, located in North Alabama near Gant. Cathedral Caverns bosts the World's Largest Cave Opening, the World's Largest Stalagmite and the World's Largest Frozen Waterfall. The tour was a real treat!

 

July 3, 2002 - UCM Press Release

Press Release

WORLD-CLASS FOSSIL DISCOVERY IN NORTHWEST ALABAMA


Just prior to the July 4th holiday last week, U.S. Representative Robert Aderholt (District 4) visited an extraordinary fossil discovery just northwest of Birmingham in Walker County.  Hosting Rep. Aderholt and his aide Bill Harris in a tour of the site were members of the Birmingham Paleontological Society (BPS), a local amateur fossil group, and a number of professional geologists and paleontologists who have participated in studying the fossils that have been recovered so far from the site.


“This is the most important discovery of Carboniferous Period tracks known; there is no comparable site in the world,” stated Prescott Atkinson, a physician at Children’s Hospital and a member of the BPS.  He was quoting from a letter sent to Rep. Aderholt from Professor Hartmut Haubold, a German paleontologist who is widely considered one of the world’s leading experts on fossil animal tracks.  Professor Haubold had written to Representative Aderholt in support of protecting the fossil site for scientific research after seeing the photographic database of more than 1300 track specimens compiled by Dr. Ron Buta, a University of Alabama astronomy professor and BPS member.  Prof. Haubold’s assessment of the site: “by quantity, by quality, and by geological age, it is the most important discovery of Carboniferous tracks hitherto known.”  This assessment was further strengthened in another letter sent to Representative Aderholt by renowned fossil track specialist Jerry MacDonald (author of Earth’s First Steps: Tracking Life Before the Dinosaurs), who visited the Walker County site in April 2002.  In the late 1980’s Mr. MacDonald found an extensive pre-dinosaur tracksite in New Mexico that dates from the Permian Period, some 30 million years “younger” than the Walker County site.


Adderhold and Rindsberg
Picture 1:  Paleontologist Dr. Andy Rindsberg explains fossil tracks to Representative Aderholt

 

examining fossil tracks
Picture 2: Rep. Aderholt and his aide Bill Harris (center) examine fossil tracks with Drs. Atkinson (L) and Rindsberg (R)

During the tour of the area, Dr. Jack Pashin, a coal geologist with the Geological Survey of Alabama, discussed the ancient history of the rocks at the site. The sediment (mud, dirt, and sand) that became shale rock and the plant material that became coal were laid down there about 310 million years ago in a swampy river delta during the Carboniferous Period (“Coal Age”), many millions of years before the dinosaurs.  Dr. Jim Lacefield, adjunct professor at the University of North Alabama and author of Lost Worlds in Alabama Rocks, continued with the ancient history of the area, explaining that this part of Alabama was near the equator when these sediments were deposited.  He explained that an ocean covered much of North America to the west and south of the present day location of Walker County.  Dr. Andy Rindsberg, a paleontologist with the Geological Survey of Alabama, took Aderholt and Harris around several tables to examine specimens of vertebrate and invertebrate tracks that have been recovered from the site, some that very morning.  Vertebrate tracks ranged from smaller than a fingernail to larger than a hand.  Bruce Relihan, Curator of Horticulture with the Birmingham Zoo and a member of BPS, showed the Congressman some examples of the many plant fossils that the site has yielded and presented him with a small amphibian trackway, found that morning at the site.  Steve Minkin, a geologist with Westinghouse in Anniston, finished the tour by explaining that there are several acres of undisturbed strata at the site, and that preservation of the site could be accomplished by including an engineered design to leave the undisturbed track-bearing rock prepared for a proper paleontological excavation.

amphibian trackway
Picture 3: Large fossil amphibian trackway

amphibian trackway

Picture 4: Fossil amphibian trackway

fish scale
Picture 5: Fossil fish scale

The site is located at a small surface coal mine owned by the New Acton Coal Company, and the group expressed their appreciation for the generosity of the company in allowing this world-class collection of fossil tracks to be assembled from broken rock in the spoil areas.  If the undisturbed rock beds still remaining in the site are properly excavated in the future, the testimony of the experts indicates that the scientific and educational value of the site will be of truly international significance.  In fact, several school field trips have already taken place at the site under the supervision of Ashley Allen, an Oneonta High School science teacher.  Mr. Allen, also a BPS member, originally discovered the tracks after being led to the site by one of his students, the grandson of Mrs. Delores Reid, owner of New Acton Coal Company.  Together the BPS fossil enthusiasts and their professional collaborators are proposing that the site could be developed as an important regional attraction for Alabama, with easy access from U.S. Highway 78 and, soon, Corridor X.  A small building onsite could serve as a museum and visitor’s center that would house many of the tracks already collected, plus tracks excavated during a future paleontological dig.  Similar to other sites out West, a pre-fabricated, portable building could be placed over an ongoing excavation and serve to protect the research and allow school classes and the public to observe paleontologists at work.

Much work remains before the vision of saving the site can be realized.  Representative Aderholt is considering introducing legislation that would preserve the site for future scientific development.  Alabama has already entered scientific history as home to a world-class Coal Age track site, and even more discoveries may lie ahead.    

For further information, please contact
Dr. Andy Rindsberg (205-349-2852, e-mail: arindsberg@gsa.state.al.us)
Dr. Prescott Atkinson (205-934-7054, e-mail: patkinso@uab.edu)
Dr. Ron Buta (205-348-3792, e-mail: rbuta@bama.ua.edu)

 

August 24, 2002 - Walker Co, AL

This month, BPS members collected at a Walker County strip mine.

September 28, 2002 - Montgomery Co, AL

We visited two late Cretaceous sites in Montgomery County, Alabama, where we collected primarily shark teeth and echinoids. A surprise awaited - one site we have visited for years used to have a huge sand pile shaped like a mushroom that was filled with shark teeth. The mushroom is no more, and all that is left is a sandpile. Last we heard, the sand was being used in the zoo. You don't want to know any more than that!

(Photos courtesy Brian Ward.)

Image GalleriesField Trip Photos2002-09-28

October 26, 2002 - Jefferson Co, AL

BPS members visited the quarry at the Ruffner Mountain Nature Center. It includes a limestone quarry containing Mississippian and Ordovician-era fossils. A number of good "teaching opportunities" were identified.

November 24, 2002 - Bibb Co, AL

This months trip was to a graptolite site in Bibb County, Alabama. This is the Athens Shale formation (Ordovician age). Graptolites are found from the Cambrian to the Carboniferous, and are an extinct group of Paleozoic colonial organisms. They are usually found as thin carbonized films in various shales or limestones.

We made several scouting stops also, one at a reclaimed strip mine, where we found the old high wall, with lots of collectible fossils well away from the "danger" area.

December 21, 2002 - Holiday Party

No field trip this month, instead we had a holiday party at Leisa's home.