DISCOVERY BOX: Fossils

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DISCOVERY BOX: Fossils DISCOVERY BOX: Fossils Educator name:______________________________________ School/group name: __________________________________ Age/grade of people that participated in box activities: ______ Number of people that participated in box activities: ________ Educator Staff Item Item Item Printed Items: received returned inventoried "Read Me First" Sheet GPNC brochures Ring-binder Notebook (43 laminated + 18 cardstock) Books/booklets: Eyewitness Books: Fossil (2) Nature Scope - Geology The Active Earth Nature Scope - Digging into Dinosaurs Usborne Guide - Rocks & Fossils Ancient Life Found in Kansas Rocks The Illustrated Dinosaur Dictionary Fossil Collecting Peterson Guide - Dinosaurs Golden Guide: Fossils Ancient Sea Life How to Draw Dinosaurs If You Are A Hunter of Fossils The Kansas School Naturalist: Fossils of Kansas National Audubon Pocket Guide - Dinosaurs National Audubon Pocket Guide - Familiar Fossils DK Pocket Guide - Fossils Dig Into Fossils Fun Facts about Rocks, Fossils and the Landscape of Kansas Geologic Time Scale Cards (30) Fossils in Missouri State Parks Cards (30) Dinosaur & Fossil Science Project cards (30) Posters: Fossils and Geologic Time Dinosaurs and Their World (3) Biofacts - Sedimentary Rocks bag (8): Sandstone Pink sandstone Chalk Blackboard chalk Coal Shale Limestone fossil marl Cone-in-cone Limestone Piece of limestone used as a rock post Arrow Heads Bag of arrow heads Loose Fossil Replicas: Icthyosaur Mesosaurus Dragonfly Pterodactylus kochi Smilodon fatalis tooth Fossil Kit I Lesson Plan box: Ammonite Crinoid Trilobite Cave Bear tooth Sabre tooth fragment Allosaurus claw fragment Plants box: Petrified wood (4) Seed fern foliage Lepidodendron bark Ocean A box: Kansas Fossils carton (12) Limestone slab with fossils Box of fossil shells (5) Box of recent sea shells & coral Fossils and Geologic Time card Ocean B box: Horn coral fossils (2) Recent horn coral Box of crinoid stems Jar of shells & fossils Pterodactylus skull Ammonite Dactyloceras Trilobite Phacops Rana Milleri Starfish Trilobite (giant) Dinosaur box: Grallator footprint replica Lambeosaurus skin replica Archaeopteryx skull replica Edmontosaurus tooth replica Tyranosaurus tooth replica Anatosaurus annectens skin replica Allosaur fragilis claw replica Hadrosaur coprolite replica Tooth impression fossil in limestone Small bag of plastic dinosaurs Materials in this box are not consumable. Please make copies of worksheets, coloring pages, etc., for you and your students to use. Please do not Remove This Sheet Updated: 2/15/2018 .
Recommended publications
  • Wec01's SSSS Fossils Test 2019
    wec01’s SSSS Fossils Test 2019 Team Name: _________________KEY________________ Team Number: ___KEY___ Team Members: ____________KEY____________, ____________KEY____________ This test consists of 18 stations with a total of 200 points. Each answer is worth one point except where specified otherwise. You are only given 2 ½ minutes with the specimens at each station, however you can work on any station’s questions at any time. Scoring Station 1: ___10___ / 10 Station 10: ___12___ / 12 Station 2: ___10___ / 10 Station 11: ____9___ / 9 Station 3: ___11___ / 11 Station 12: ___11___ / 11 Station 4: ___10___ / 10 Station 13: ___10___ / 10 Station 5: ___10___ / 10 Station 14: ___10___ / 10 Station 6: ____9___ / 9 Station 15: ___12___ / 12 Station 7: ____9___ / 9 Station 16: ____9___ / 9 Station 8: ___10___ / 10 Station 17: ___10___ / 10 Station 9: ____9___ / 9 Station 18: ___29___ / 29 Total: __200___ / 200 Team Number: _KEY_ Station 1: Dinosaurs (10 pt) 1. Identify the genus of specimen A Tyrannosaurus (1 pt) 2. Identify the genus of specimen B Stegosaurus (1 pt) 3. Identify the genus of specimen C Allosaurus (1 pt) 4. Which specimen(s) (A, B, or C) are A, C (1 pt) Saurischians? 5. Which two specimens (A, B, or C) lived at B, C (1 pt) the same time? 6. Identify the genus of specimen D Velociraptor (1 pt) 7. Identify the genus of specimen E Coelophysis (1 pt) 8. Which specimen (D or E) is commonly E (1 pt) found in Ghost Ranch, New Mexico? 9. Which specimen (A, B, C, D, or E) would D (1 pt) specimen F have been found on? 10.
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  • The Largest Tropical Peat Mires in Earth History
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  • PRISCUM the Newsletter of the Paleontological Society Volume 13, Number 2, Fall 2004
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  • Div B Fossils Answer Key
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  • Annual Meeting 2002
    Newsletter 51 74 Newsletter 51 75 The Palaeontological Association 46th Annual Meeting 15th–18th December 2002 University of Cambridge ABSTRACTS Newsletter 51 76 ANNUAL MEETING ANNUAL MEETING Newsletter 51 77 Holocene reef structure and growth at Mavra Litharia, southern coast of Gulf of Corinth, Oral presentations Greece: a simple reef with a complex message Steve Kershaw and Li Guo Oral presentations will take place in the Physiology Lecture Theatre and, for the parallel sessions at 11:00–1:00, in the Tilley Lecture Theatre. Each presentation will run for a New perspectives in palaeoscolecidans maximum of 15 minutes, including questions. Those presentations marked with an asterisk Oliver Lehnert and Petr Kraft (*) are being considered for the President’s Award (best oral presentation by a member of the MONDAY 11:00—Non-marine Palaeontology A (parallel) Palaeontological Association under the age of thirty). Guts and Gizzard Stones, Unusual Preservation in Scottish Middle Devonian Fishes Timetable for oral presentations R.G. Davidson and N.H. Trewin *The use of ichnofossils as a tool for high-resolution palaeoenvironmental analysis in a MONDAY 9:00 lower Old Red Sandstone sequence (late Silurian Ringerike Group, Oslo Region, Norway) Neil Davies Affinity of the earliest bilaterian embryos The harvestman fossil record Xiping Dong and Philip Donoghue Jason A. Dunlop Calamari catastrophe A New Trigonotarbid Arachnid from the Early Devonian Windyfield Chert, Rhynie, Philip Wilby, John Hudson, Roy Clements and Neville Hollingworth Aberdeenshire, Scotland Tantalizing fragments of the earliest land plants Steve R. Fayers and Nigel H. Trewin Charles H. Wellman *Molecular preservation of upper Miocene fossil leaves from the Ardeche, France: Use of Morphometrics to Identify Character States implications for kerogen formation Norman MacLeod S.
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  • Hyperodapedon Gordoni Further Observations Upon
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  • Plant Evolution
    Conquering the land The rise of plants Ordovician Spores Algae (algal mats) Green freshwater algae Bacteria Fungae Bryophytes Moses? Liverworts? Little body fossil evidence Silurian Wenlock Stage 423-428mya Psilophytes Rhyniopsidsa important later in early Devonian Cooksonia Rhynia Branching stems, flattened sporangia at tips No leaves, no roots short 30 cms rhizoids Zosterophylls Early stem group of Lycopodiophytes Ancestors of Class Lycopsida (clubmosses) Prevalent in Devonian Spores at tips and on branches Lycopsids (?) Baragwanathia with microphylls in Australia Zosterophylls Silurian Cooksonia Development of Soil Fungae Bacteria Algae Organic matter Arthropods and annelids Change in erosion Change in CO2 Devonian Devonian Early Devonian simple structure Rhynie Chert (Rhyniophytes) Trimerophytes First with main shoot Give rise to Ferns and Progymnosperms Up to 3m tall Animal life (mainly arthropods) Late Devonian Forests First true wood (lignin) Forest structure develops (stories) Sphenopsids (Calamites) Lycopsids (Lepidodendron) Seed Ferns (Pteridosperm) Progymnosperm Archaeopteris Cladoxylopsid First vertebrates present Upper Devonian Lycopsida 374-360 mya Leaves and roots differentiated Most ancient with living relatives Megaphylls branching in on plane Photosynthetic webbing Shrub size vertical growth limited (weak) Lateral (secondary) growth (woody) Development of roots Homosporous Heterosporous Upper Devonian Calamites (Sphenopsid) Horestail Sphenophyta (Calamites-Annularia) Devonian Archaeopteris Ur. Devonian - Lr. Carboniferous
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  • Sept 2005 APS Bulletin
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  • Quiz 8 – Feb 5 STATION 5 Identify the Genus of Each a ______B ______C ______
    STATION 1 (refer to pictures) STATION 2 (refer to pictures) Which creature with a backbone roamed the planet first? Which of these organisms had lysosomes? ______________ By letter ________ In what Geologic Period _______ Which of these organisms can make a siliceous rock? _______ Identify the two Anthozoans by Genus Which two plants thrived in the Carboniferous ? __________________ and __________________ _______________________________ and ____________________________ Which creature had a plueral lobe ? __________________ Which of these is a desiduous plant alive today __________ Which went extinct during the Cretaceous-Palocene major Which is pelagic ? ______________ extincton? ____________________________ Which is benthic ? _______________ Identify the creature that was on earth first: _________________ STATION 3 STATION 4 -- (in the box, or online in pcitures) Identify the 3 invertebrate fossils in the box (or in the picture): Identify the Genus of the large black round fossil (A): ____________ A. Phylum __________ Class _________________ Identify the Phylum of the white fossil (B): _________________ B. Phylum ____________ Class ________________ The small round things (C) are from my front yard. Identify the Phylum and Genus: ______________ , ________________ C. Phylum ___________ Class _______________ TRUE OR FALSE: All these genus contained plastids. Which of these creatures had a pedicle valve _____________ TRUE OR FALSE: None of these were around in the Devonian. Which of these creatures had a calyx __________________ TRUE OR FALSE: All of these contributed to Carboniferous coal Which of these creatures used nematocysts ______________ development. Quiz 8 – Feb 5 STATION 5 Identify the genus of each A ________________ B _______________ C _________________ Refer to the following statements for the two questions at the bottom i They lived at the same time ii.
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  • Back Matter (PDF)
    Index Page numbers in italics refer to Figures. Page numbers in bold refer to Tables. Abadeh Section (Iran) 74, 81, 83, 112 Annweiler Formation 397 Abadehceras 198 Anomalonema reumauxi–Peudestheria simoni assemblage Abichites 199 zone 370, 372–373 Abo Formation 73, 408, 409, 412, 425 Antarctica, palynostratigraphy 337 Abrahamskraal Formation 64, 78, 80, 418, 428 Anthracolithic System 25 radiometric dating 86 Anuites 193 Abrek Formation 295 Apache Dam Formation 409 acritarchs 322–323 Aquaw Creek (Colorado), magnetic polarity data 66 Admiral Formation 410 Arabia, palynostratigraphy 333, 333 Adrianites 194 Arabia Plate, fusuline biostratigraphy 255 A. elegans 195 Araksian Stage 40 Afghanistan Arasella 199 fusuline biostratigraphy 255, 260–261 Araxoceras spp. 196, 198 Agathiceras 187, 189 A. latissimum 198 Aidaralash CreekGSSP (Kazakstan)3, 28,29, 32, 53,67, 88,187,321,325 A. ventrosulcatum 198 Akiyoshi Terrane, fusuline biostratigraphy 270–271, 271 Archer City Formation 410, 411 Akmilleria 189 archosaurs 51 Aktastinian Substage 2, 33, 189 Argentina ammonoid assemblages 185 magnetic polarity data 64, 69, 72 Aktasty River Section 33 palynostratigraphy 330, 331, 331 Aktastynian Stage, ammonoid assemblages 185 tetrapods 387 Aktubinskia 189 Aricoceras 192 Aktyubinsk section 33 Aristoceras 187 Al Khlata Formation 336 Aristoceratoides 194 Alaska Region, fusuline biostratigraphy 255 Arizona, tetrapods 412–413 Albaillella cavitata interval zone 154, 157 Arnhardtia 39 Albaillella excelsa interval zone 155 Arrayo de Alamillo Formation 395, 409 Albaillella levis interval zone 155 Arroya del Agua Formation 408, 409, 425 Albaillella sinuata abindance zone 148–149 Arroya Formation 410 Albaillella triangularis interval zone 155, 157 Arroyo Vale Formation 411 Albaillella xiaodongensis assemblage zone 148 Artinskia spp.
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  • 23085402.Pdf
    wooi Seventh Gondwana Symposium São Paulo, Brazil July 18-22, 1988 ABSTRACTS SPONSORING ORGANIZATIONS Subconmission on Gondwsna Stratigraphy, Conission on Stratigraphy, Inter- national Union of Geological Sciences (HJGS) Instituto de Geociências, Universidade de Sao Paulo, São Paulo Petróleo Brasileiro S.A. (PETROBRÁS), Rio de Janeiro Departamento Nacional da Produção Mineral (DNFM). Ministério das Minas e Emergia, Brasília Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP), São Paulo Secretaria da Ciência e Tecnologia do Estado de São Paulo Comissão InterraLnisterial para os Recursos do Mar (CIRM), Brasília Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq), Brasília Empresas Nucleares Brasileiras (NUCLEBRÁS), Rio de Janeiro Academia Brasileira de Ciências, Rio de Janeiro Sociedade Brasileira de Geologia, São Paulo Sociedade Brasileira de Geofísica, São Paulo Sociedade Brasileira de Paleontologia, são Paulo Centro de Investigação do Gondwana, Instituto de Geociências, Universida- de Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre Eliane - Azulejos e Pisos, Criciúma Lapis Joham Faber S/A, São Carlos Instituto Antártico Argentino, Buenos Aires Geologia e Sondagens Ltda (GEOSOL), Belo Horizonte OTHER CONTRIBUTIONS IGCP Project 260 Earth's glacial record IGCP Project 237 Floras of the Gondwanic continents LiSÍ of Contents Page Gondwana Plate margins and fragmentation history (IV) (Monday, July 18) 01-07 Gondwana basins (II) (Monday, July 18) 19-30 Gondwana biota and biostratigraphy (III) (Tuesday, July 19) 31-46 Crustal
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  • Lepidodendron
    A long-leaved specimen of Lepidodendron ROBERT M. KOSANKE U.S. Geological Survey, Box 25046, Denver Federal Center, Denver, Colorado 80225 ABSTRACT DESCRIPTION OF THE FOSSIL Lepidodendron obovatum Sternberg var. grandifolium var. nov. The fossil specimen, Illinois State Geological Survey Paleobotan- is described from a single, unusual specimen collected from the roof ical Collection B-1817, is shown in Figure 1 and is on permanent shale of the Beckley coal (Lower Pennsylvanian) of West Virginia. display at the Illinois State Geological Survey. I here propose the L. obovatum Sternberg var. grandifolium var. nov. is an un- varietal name Lepidodendron obovatum Sternberg var. grand- branched stem with attached leaves and with pyramidal leaf cush- ifolium var. nov. for this specimen. The naming of a new variety ions. The leaves are long, attaining a length of more than 78 cm; requires that the type be redesignated as L. obovatum Sternberg they are sessile, entire, and thought to be sharply pointed. Leaves of var. obovatum. The new variety described in this paper is an un- such length are not generally associated with Lepidodendron, but branched stem 1.03 m long and 10 cm in diameter at the base, tap- with Sigillaria. The description of this new variety of Lepidoden- ering to 5 cm in diameter at the top of the stem. The stem has typi- dron helps to confirm the idea that there is little difference between cal pyramidal leaf cushions arranged in a high spiral, as shown in the foliage of Lepidodendron and Sigillaria. The unbranched con- Figures 1 and 4. The leaf cushions are reasonably well preserved, dition of the new variety herein described is thought to represent a and Figure 2 illustrates the discernible features.
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