Field Work Travelogue – Day fifteen

Today involved excavation.

My student continued working to expose – and now prepare for jacketing – the marvelous soft-shell turtle she found a few days ago.

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I worked on another pit looking for some big mammalian ungulates. We dug a big hole.

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And, as it typical of paleontological site, just as we were about to abandon this hole as not yielding anything, we found a scrap of bone.

I know what I’ll be working on for the next few days.

Field Work Travelogue – Day fourteen

It’s been a hot day.

Today’s main task was to do some color analysis to see if that can help distinguish between the Uinta Formation and the overlying Duchesne River Formation.

We also spent a bit of time surface collect for some vertebrate fossils. It was a lovely place to work.

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We went back to camp a little early and set about to catalog the fossils we’ve been collecting. There are a few!

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Another day in the field tomorrow!

Field Work Travelogue – Day thirteen

Another great day.

We went exploring and played with a color analyzer as a potential method to distinguish between the two important vertebrate yielding units in the area.

Then it was back to the same locality we’ve been at daily thus far. We flipped the jacket we made yesterday and brought it back to camp.

As we left the field, the clouds were building…

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Another promising day for tomorrow!

Stink Bug – Chapter 18

I sat down and waited. K’eel was agitated and groomed her feathers furiously, warbling to herself as she did so. Five minutes passed. My knees were aching, so I got up and walked around. I peeked at what V’x had been working on. It was a series of pegs on a board. Some of the pegs were brightly painted. Others were still being carved.

“Keel?” I said.

K’eel squawked at me loudly, fluffing her feathers. She went back to grooming.Continue reading “Stink Bug – Chapter 18”

Field Work Travelogue – Day eleven

What a marvelous day! We saw some wild ponies and a few pronghorn. I’ll post some photos eventually.

We visited an Eocene locality today and found a few turtles (like whole turtles, though munched up) and a few mammal teeth and jaws.

Maybe tomorrow I’ll remember to take a photo or two with this phone so I can share.

Here’s the one photo I took today:

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This is a photo of a red layer just below the ground surface. We had wondered if the red layer was the source of the fossils. Now we think it’s modern soil-formation processes.

What do you think?

Field Work Travelogue – Day nine

We packed up this morning and left the Hanna Basin. It’s always sad to leave. But I have plans for next summer already. Need to find an unsuspecting undergraduate who wants a senior research project…

Today we went on the Vernal for the second leg of our journey. We paused briefly at Flaming Gorge, where I’d never been before.

Flaming Gorge Dam
Flaming Gorge Dam

Tomorrow, it’s into the Uinta Basin. Wish us luck!

Field Work Travelogue – Day eight

Tomorrow, we leave the field. We’re hoping the weather won’t delay our departure.

It’s always a little sad to leave the field, but we were highly successful. Today, we got to go on a lovely geologic tour of the Hanna Formation. We geeked out a bit over an awesome angular unconformity, collected a bunch more mammal teeth from a favorite locality, and found this:

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Yup, I think that’s a horsetail, or something similar. Paleocene in age. Pretty cool, eh?

Tomorrow’s a travel day, and then it’s into the Eocene for us!

Field Work Travelogue – Day seven

We’ve succeeded in accomplishing the goals I had set for the season – at least for this field area – and still have one more day in the field.

We dug some trenches, for color analysis of the rocks.

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And had a long discussion about a particular rock. So tell me, what does this rock look like to you?

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We’ve been rained on a lot, and will probably get rained on again before we’re done.

What’s everyone else up to this summer?