Leah and Jan cooling off at lunch.
BPS members defied the extreme heat and went to south Alabama to assist in collecting fossils and close down the dig site until the weather cools off some. A number of mosasaur bones were found, and a mosasaur jaw still containing a tooth. Other fossils found included shark teeth, shark vertebra, various varieties of fish, turtle bone, and enchodus jaw and teeth. The thermometer read 110 degrees, so after lunch under a covered pavilion, we headed to a nearby creek to cool down. The creek yielded numerous shark teeth, brachiopods, and a few cephalopod pieces.
The long pointy tooth is an Enchodus tooth, and the others are shark teeth
Excavating a mosasaur jaw bone. Several members carefully sifted the chalk down the gully from the main excavation, finding several vertebra.
Fish vertebra, enchodus tooth and several shark teeth found in the gullies. Notice the whiteness of one of the shark teeth - many have deteriorated under the hot sun.
This month the group went to a shallow river in Covington Co, AL we haven't visited for a long time. Our memory of this site is that the pickings were better in years past. It took a while to find fossils. We don't dig, as the landowner has requested "no digging", but most of our honey holes were empty, possibly from the recent rainy seasons or over-collecting by commercial collectors. Whatever the reason, everyone left with a small handful of shark teeth, and we had a great day visiting and keeping cool in the river. Jan and Lea decided to arrive at the site via kayak, making for an interesting upriver paddle.
Our annual trip to Butler County turned up several shark teeth, fish vertebra, ray teeth, turritella in cochina, and a number of pottery pieces. The day was spent roaming the creek, playing in the sand and creek, or just hanging out sunbathing. Several members camped out for the weekend on the bald, where more fossils were found.
This month the group traveled to Butler County, Alabama, to a sandy creek which runs through early Tertiary and late Cretaceous material. The weather was overcast on Saturday, making collecting very pleasant. A number of members camped out for the weekend. Sunday the sun was out, and it made us grateful for the cloud cover on Saturday!
The sandy beaches and gravel areas yielded up shark teeth, ray teeth, some nautiloid sections, and recent mammal material which was sometimes as fasinating as the fossils.
We had quite a few young people on the trip who enjoyed both the fossil collecting and swimming, splashing and running in the shallow creek. There is an area of soft clay, and some enterprising young men fashioned bowls from it.
More about the artifacts found on the trip.
--Photos courtesy Claire Smith and Vicki Lais.
Coquina, a very hard "stone" composed of compressed shells, used in many parts of Florida as building stone.
Making ones way up the creek took a very long time. First you have to play in the water, feel the sand between your toes. Then you have to stop at every gravel bar and see what's there. It takes most people hours to get less than 1/4 mile.
Hanging out on the large sandy beach. This is like a crossroads, everyone passes this way, or returns here to rest.
Some tiny gastropods found on the flat limestone "bald", and an unkown black item with serated edges.
This nice gastropod was found at this site several years ago, and was brought to the trip to display.
BPS members and guests headed down to Greene county, Alabama for our July trip. This site is a creek covered with pea gravel - making screening for shark teeth and other fossils quite difficult. However, most found it fairly easy to spot the fossils lying on top of the gravel. Numerous shark teeth were found, a couple of mosasaur teeth, several ptychodus teeth, a gar vertebra and tooth, crocodilian bone, clams, oysters, and bryozoan. Vicki found a tooth so tiny (about 1/8 inch), that when she put it on her finger to get a closeup, it rolled off. The next 45 minutes was spent digging through the gravel in an ever widening circle, trying to find the tiny tooth again. As we finally gave up, she rolled the gravel around again, and there it was! It went in a medicine bottle for safekeeping, until a photo could be taken in a "safe" location! It has been identified as a gar tooth, which is more rare than mosasaur teeth in this area.
--Photos courtesy Vicki Lais
On 11 April, BPS visited a quarry in Morgan county. After signing in and filling out all the release forms we were escorted to the dig site. The quarry contains limestone, and the fossils found were primarily from the Mississippian Period of the Paleozoic Era.
The Mississipian Period is known as the "Age of Crinoids". This period spanned approximately 360-320 million years. It was named for the exposed rocks in the Mississippian River valley near St. Louis by geologist Alexander Winchell in 1870. The quarry visited was mining limestone. Limestone is a sedimentary rock composed largely of the mineral calcite (calcium carbonate: CaCO3). Shells and other marine byproducts settle on the ocean floor and are compressed for millions of years as layer by layer of the calcite are depostited. Limestone also contains variable amounts of silica, chert, sand, silt and other impurities. It can be crystalline, clastic (composed of fragments of other rocks), granular or massive depending on the method of formation.
We had an excellent turn out. It turned a bit cold, but that didn’t dampen the spirits of the members.
After being briefed by the quarry escorts, who remained with us, we began to spread out and search for treasures. Most of the material found was in limestone rock, and some was very difficult to extract without heavy chisels and hammers.
Several Blastoids (Pentremites pyriformise and Pentremites godoni) were found by most on top of the ground in small washes. Blastoids originated in the Ordovician period and reached their greatest diversity in the Mississippian period. The picture below shows the main body or theca of the blastoids. It was protected by a series of interlocking plates made from calcium carbonate. This was attached to a stalk, which in turn was anchored to the sea floor by a holdfast. Similar to the Crinoid.
Most of the blastoids were found on the surface in small washes. Here Ron is praying to the fossil gods to show him a blastoid as everyone else had found them and he had not.
There were many occurrences of Bryozoans at the site. Several nice finds were made. Below is a picture of an Archimedes, and Fenestella Bryozoan. Fenestella bryozoa colonies, are lace-like in construction, and the individual bryozoan animals lived in microscopic tubes or pores on the lace branches. The fenestrate bryozoan colony called Archimedes lived attached to a screw-shaped support structure. Most often only the support structure is found. Bryozoans have existed for hundreds of millions of years (since the early Ordovician) and are common fossils in marine deposits. Thousands of Byrozoans species exist today all over the world.
Becky found an unusual item. James Lamb ( Paleontologist at McWane Science Center in Birmingham, Alabama) was called over to help identify it. The find turned out to be a nice Petalodus (Petalodontidae (Petalodontiformes) sharks tooth. It took over an hour and a half to extract it from the limestone it was embedded in. Becky donated the specimen to the McWane Center museum.
Here's a closer look at the Petalodus tooth. Petalodus sharks were estimated to reach a length of about 2 meters. Their basic diet consisted of sponges and other invertebrates.
A few Brachiopods were also found. Brachiopods are two valved animals, similar to the bivalves today.
Most Brachiopods were attached to the bottom by means of a fleshy stalk and were not free swimming like many of the bivalves today. The Brachiopod in this picture (spiriferina transversa) was 4 cm across.
Not just fossils were found. Here's one of many calcite crystal clusters that were also found. Incidently these crystals are simply the crystalline form of limestone (CaCo3).
Many Crinoid and Blastoid stem parts were found on the surface of the collecting area.
Several specimens of horn coral were also found. Horn corals are from the extinct order of corals called Rugosa. Rugosa means wrinkled. The outside of these corals have a wrinkled appearance. Horn Coral grows in a long cone shape like a bull’s horn. The fossil is the skeleton of the coral animal or polyp. The animal lived at the top of the cone. They had many tentacles sticking out to gather food. The tentacles gave the horn coral a flower like appearance.
Several outcroppings of other coral were also found. The species of coral has not yet been identified.
Leisa found a small trilobite. The species is not known at this time. Tiribites are found in many other counties in Alabama. In the geologic time scale, they came to dominate the seas around 540 million years ago and became extinct around 245 million years ago.
Here Martha shows her prize of a limestone slab containing numerous fossils.
Here's a closeup of the limestone slab containing a collection of many different fossils including crinoiod, blastoid, stem parts, archimedes and various other bryozoans.
Don and Jamie discuss their finds near where many blastoids had been picked up.
Pictures courtesy Vicki Lais and Ron Beerman