June 28, 2008 - Cretaceous Fossils, Sumter County, AL
Trip to Sumter County, Alabama. . . more to follow, wanted to get pictures up for everyone.
(Pictures courtesy Jan Novak and Vicki Lais)
Trip to Sumter County, Alabama. . . more to follow, wanted to get pictures up for everyone.
(Pictures courtesy Jan Novak and Vicki Lais)
Our July meeting will be held 7-7 at 7pm. The speaker will be Dr. Ron Buta, a professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Alabama. He has been actively involved in collection and documentation of fossil trackways from the Steven Minkin Footprint Site for a number of years, and is also internationally known for his research on galaxies and astrophysics.
This Saturday in late May was HOT!
Many of you will remember our January speaker, Terry Knight, a grad student at Auburn University, who spoke on fossils from the Ingersoll Shale in the Eutaw Formation of east-central Alabama. The 2006 dig was organized and coordinated by Patrick Sean Bingham, also a grad student at Auburn University at the time.
The April 2008 field trip brought beautiful weather and a nice relaxing weekend. Claire, Martha and Leisa were able to get to the site on Friday and enjoyed an evening gazing up at the stars and listening to the night birds.
Our June speaker will be Jon Gilliam of the University of Alabama, who will be presenting his research on Cretaceous predacious shell borings found in Sumter County, Alabama.
BPS regular monthly meetings are held on the 1st Monday of each month at the McWane Science Center. Park in the deck on "Level C", go through doors marked Special Event Center, and follow signs to meeting. The business meeting begins at 7:00, followed by the program around 7:45 or 8pm.
George Phillips, paleontology curator at the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science will be speaking to us about Cretaceous paleo research. Here is some advance information:
Title: Upper Cretaceous Echinoderms of the Mid-South
A rare 5.2 magnitude earthquake hit southern Illinois early on Friday, April 18, 2008. It was felt as far south as Memphis, TN, and as far east as Ashville, NC. Because the ground isn't as fractured as in California, they tend to be felt in a much wider area. Since the quake was deep and not close to the surface, property damage was minimal.
Read original story from ABC News . . . (broken link http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/Weather/story?id=4682373&page=1)
A recent article in Gallivant magazine highlights a museum in East Tennessee where a road building project uncovered a huge repository of fossils, including camels, elephants, rhinos, and tapirs. The fossils date from the Miocene, about seven million years ago. The site covers about five acres, where visitors can take a guided tour to watch as the excavation progresses, and learn about the fossils from the exhibits housed in a 33,000 square foot museum.
The 112 acre Huntsville Botanical Garden will feature full sized dinosaur models through July 15, 2008. They will be displayed in life like settings using plants similar to those of ancient times. Included will be a 30 foot Edmontosaurus, a 30 foot Parasaurolophus, a 20 foot Allosaurus and many others.
--from Gallivant, Spring 2008
Original article below. Click to enlarge.