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Kent Sundell Compiled the Field Logs
AAPG TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE SEMINAR FIELD GUIDE to: Impact Craters and Outcrops of the K-T Boundary Casper, Wyoming USA August 18-22, 2017 Published July 28, 2017 2 | P a g e AAPG TOTAL SOLAR ECLIPSE SEMINAR FIELD GUIDE CONTENTS Itinerary………………………………………………………………Page 5 Instructor Bios…………………………………………………….Page 9 Packing List Field Gear…..……………………………………Page 13 Field Safety…………………………………………………………Page 14 Casper Area Geologic Map………………………………….Page 16 Casper Area Sat. Images……………………………………..Page 17 Wyoming Stratigraphic Nomenclature Chart……….Page 19 Field Day 1- August 19, 2017………………………………Page 21 Trip Log Salt Creek, WY Cretaceous Fossils..Page 24 Trip Log Linch/Sussex, WY K/T Boundary…..Page 29 Field Day 2- August 20, 2017…………………………..….Page 31 Paleontology and Geology of the White River Formation……………………. Page 40 Trip Log Douglas, WY Impact Craters…………Page 45 Trip Log White River Fm. Fossils………………..Page 47 Star Gazing Guide……………………………………………….Page 49 Field Day 3- August 21, 2017……………………………….Page 56 Total Solar Eclipse- Isaak Walton Lodge, Casper Additional Literature on the Subjects Covered…..Page 73 3 | P a g e ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This Field Guide was compiled by Doug Cook who accepts all responsibility for mistakes, errors, and omissions. Kent Sundell compiled the field logs. Special thanks to Jack Schmitt and Jim Reilly whose tireless participation and enthusiasm in AAPG Astrogeology events give us their professional perspective and expertise. We owe mountains of gratitude to Kent Sundell, Casper College, staff and students for organizing, guiding, and operating the field trips in this Seminar. Thanks to Don Clarke whose eclipse experience, ideas, and Casper connections were the catalyst for the AAPG Eclipse Seminar. -
KENNETH CARPENTER, Ph.D. Director and Curator Of
KENNETH CARPENTER, Ph.D. Director and Curator of Paleontology Prehistoric Museum Utah State University - College of Eastern Utah 155 East Main Street Price, Utah 84501 Education May, 1996. Ph.D., Geology University of Colorado, Boulder, CO. Dissertation “Sharon Springs Member, Pierre Shale (Lower Campanian) depositional environment and origin of it' s Vertebrate fauna, with a review of North American plesiosaurs” 251 p. May, 1980. B.S. in Geology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO. Aug-Dec. 1977 Apprenticeship, Smithsonian Inst., Washington DC Professional Museum Experience 1975 – 1980: University of Colorado Museum, Boulder, CO. 1983 – 1984: Mississippi Museum of Natural History, Jackson, MS. 1984 – 1986: Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Philadelphia. 1986: Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, PA. 1986: Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, Norman, OK. 1987 – 1989: Museum of the Rockies, Bozeman, MT. 1989 – 1996: Chief Preparator, Denver Museum of Nature and Science, Denver, CO. 1996 – 2010: Chief Preparator, and Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, Denver Museum of Nature and Science, Denver, CO. 2006 – 2007; 2008-2009: Acting Department Head, Chief Preparator, and Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology, Denver Museum of Nature and Science, Denver, CO. 2010 – present: Director, Prehistoric Museum, Price, UT 2010 – present: Associate Vice Chancellor, Utah State University Professional Services: 1991 – 1998: Science Advisor, Garden Park Paleontological Society 1994: Senior Organizer, Symposium "The Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation: An Interdisciplinary Study" 1996: Scientific Consultant Walking With Dinosaurs , BBC, England 2000: Scientific Consultant Ballad of Big Al , BBC, England 2000 – 2003: Associate Editor, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 2001 – 2003: Associate Editor, Earth Sciences History journal 2003 – present: Scientific Advisor, HAN Project 21 Dinosaur Expos, Tokyo, Japan. -
Christopher A. Brochu
Curriculum Vitae CHRISTOPHER A. BROCHU Department of Geoscience Phone: 319-353-1808 University of Iowa Fax: 319-335-1821 Iowa City, IA 52242 Email: [email protected] EDUCATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL HISTORY Higher Education 1993-1997 Ph.D. Geological Sciences University of Texas at Austin 1989-1993 M.A. Geological Sciences University of Texas at Austin 1985-1989 B.S. Geology University of Iowa Professional and Academic Positions 2010 - present Miller Teaching Fellow, University College, University of Iowa 2006 - present Associate Professor, Department of Geoscience, University of Iowa 2001 - 2006 Assistant Professor, Department of Geoscience, University of Iowa 2001 - present Research Associate, Vertebrate Paleontology Laboratory, Texas Memorial Museum 2001 - present Research Associate, Department of Geology, Field Museum 2001 - present Research Associate, Science Museum of Minnesota 1998 - 2000 Postdoctoral Research Scientist, Department of Geology, Field Museum Honors and Awards 2011 Fellowship, Obermann Center for Advanced Studies, University of Iowa 2011 Career Development Award, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Iowa 2006 Dean’s Scholar, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Iowa 2005 Collegiate Teaching Award, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Iowa 1996 Romer Prize, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 1996 Stoye Award in General Herpetology, American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists 1996 Best Student Technical Sessions Speaker, Geological Sciences, University of Texas -
Additions to the Early Cretaceous Dinosaur Fauna of Transbaikalia, Eastern Russia
Proceedings of the Zoological Institute RAS Vol. 313, No. 4, 2009, рр. 363–378 УДК: 57.072:551.763 ADDITIONS TO THE EARLY CRETACEOUS DINOSAUR FAUNA OF TRANSBAIKALIA, EASTERN RUSSIA A.O. Averianov1* and P.P. Skutschas2 1Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya Emb. 1, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia; e-mail: [email protected] 2Saint Petersburg State University, Universitetskaya Emb. 7/9, 199034 Saint Petersburg, Russia; e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT Eight dinosaur taxa are currently known from the Early Cretaceous (Barremian-Aptian) Murtoi Formation in the Lake Gusinoe Depression of western Transbaikalia: the theropod Richardoestesia sp.* and indeterminate therizinosauroid, ornithomimosaur and dromaeosaurid material; a titanosauriforme sauropod (cf. Euhelopus), and cf. Mongolosaurus sp.; and an indeterminate ornithopod* and the ceratopsian Psittacosaurus sp. (taxa marked with an asterisk were not reported previously). In the more easterly Chikoi-Khilok Depression the Early Cretaceous (Aptian) Khilok Formation has produced fragmentary remains of four dinosaur taxa: the theropod ‘Prodeinodon’ sp. and an indeterminate dromaeosaurid, an indeterminate titanosauriform (cf. Nemegtosaurus) and an indeterminate ornithopod. The most notable differences between the two faunas are the absence of large carnivorous theropods in the Murtoi Formation and the different composition of the sauropod and, perhaps, the ornithopod faunas in each basin. Key words: Dinosauria, Early Cretaceous, Transbaikalia, Russia ДОПОЛНЕНИЯ К -
Next Meeting: Wednesday, December 9Th... Online!
Dallas Paleontological Society December 2020 Dallas December 2020 Paleontological Society Next meeting: Wednesday, December 9th... Online! FEATHERING UTAHRAPTOR The DPS will have a very special online meeting on Wednesday, De- cember 9th. We will start earlier than normal, at 6:30pm, for a show-and -tell of fossils. We will moderate the session, and each person should limit themselves to one fossil. You are invited to show it live on your web camera, but experiment first to make sure it can be well lit and in focus. If unsure, you could take a photograph and share that instead. DPS ex- perts will help identify it, if needed, so please be willing to share where you found the specimen (general locality). This online sharing will re- place what many of us love about our in-persons meeting, where we all get to see other’s finds and show our own. Then at 7:00pm, the formal meeting will begin, and Dr. James Kirkland, Utah State Paleontologist, will speak on “Feathering Utahraptor,” about the history of dromaeosaurid discoveries, their paleobiology, including the one he named Utahraptor ostrommaysorum. As if that is not fun enough, we will also hold the annual election for DPS board members. Jim received his PhD from the University of Colorado under the supervision of the great Cretaceous stratigrapher and invertebrate paleontologist Erle Kauffman. He taught at the University of Nebraska for two years, then was paleontolo- gist for Dinamation International Society for nine years. He then joined the Utah Geological Survey and became the Utah State Paleontologist, a position he has held for over eighteen years. -
Dinosaurs Take Flight
SPECIAL ISSUE: DINOSAURS TAKE FLIGHT Terrible Lizards: A New Family Portrait nside the U.S. and Russian Space Programs - , _aunches September 17 October 1 2005 US Destinations ' Russian Destinations Rose Center for Earth and Sp Baykonur Cosmodrome *" New York City Kazakhstan ' Goddard Space Center , Mission Control Greenbelt, MD ;. Moscow, Russia Smithsonian Institution, Yuri Gagarin # | Cosmonaut National Air & Space Musetil Training Center Washington D.C. - 1, (GCTC) Moscow Kennedy Space Cente*"^* 'ptional Cosmonaut Training Cape Canaveral, FL 1 Star City Johnson Space Cent Houston, TX An around-the-world, red-carpet seminar examining humankind's ongoing efforts in planetary science and space travel i^ERiCAN Museum S Natural History ^ • Discovery Tours Central Park yVest^t 79th Street, New York, New York 1 0024-5 I 92 ::^|Ei|462.-8687 or 2 1 2-769-5toB^??^P?TI 2-769-5755 E-mail: [email protected] www.discoverytours.org MAY 2005 VOLUME 114 NUMBER SPECIAL ISSUE: DINOSAURS TAKE FLIGHT FEATURES 40 ALL IN THE FAMILY A dadogmm shows how dinosaurs are related to one another—and where the birds fit in. 42 BIRD'S-EYE VIEW 34 THE VARIETIES OF TYRANNOSAURS Because modern dinosaurs are flying all around us, examining Knowledge about the most 48 BUTTING HEADS them closely can ofler new fearsome dinosaurs and their relatives Thefour greatest controversies insights into the lives is finally measuring up in dinosaur science of theirfossilized ancestors. to the animals' fame. J. DAVID ARCHIBALD MATTHEW T. CARRANO MARK A. NORELL AND XU XING SANKAR CHATTERJEE LUIS M. CHIAPPE AND PATRICK M. O'CONNOR ANDREW A. -
The Taphonomy, Paleoecology, and Depositional Environment Of
W&M ScholarWorks Undergraduate Honors Theses Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 5-2011 The Taphonomy, Paleoecology, and Depositional Environment of Vertebrate Microfossil Bonebeds from the Late Cretaceous Hell Creek Formation in Garfield County, Montana Sean Michael Moran College of William and Mary Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/honorstheses Part of the Geology Commons Recommended Citation Moran, Sean Michael, "The Taphonomy, Paleoecology, and Depositional Environment of Vertebrate Microfossil Bonebeds from the Late Cretaceous Hell Creek Formation in Garfield County, Montana" (2011). Undergraduate Honors Theses. Paper 419. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/honorstheses/419 This Honors Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Undergraduate Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Taphonomy, Paleoecology, and Depositional Environment of Vertebrate Microfossil Bonebeds from the Late Cretaceous Hell Creek Formation in Garfield County, Montana A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of Bachelors of Science in Geology from The College of William and Mary by Sean Michael Moran Accepted for (Honors, High Honors) Rowan Lockwood, Director Matthew Carrano Christopher Bailey John Swaddle Williamsburg, VA April 15, 2011 Table of Contents List of Figures and Tables 3 Abstract 4 Introduction 5 Vertebrate Microfossil Bonebed Formation 7 Vertebrate Microfossil Bonebed Paleoecology 8 Geologic Setting 9 Hell Creek Vertebrate Fauna 12 Methods 16 HC10.01 20 HC10.02 21 HC10.03 23 HC10.04 24 HC10.05 25 Percent Diversity and Percent Abundance 26 Rarefaction 32 Amount of Wear 39 Differences in Maximum Dimension 41 Size vs. -
KRAIG LAWRENCE DERSTLER Department of Geology
KRAIG LAWRENCE DERSTLER Department of Geology & Geophysics University of New Orleans New Orleans, Louisiana 70148 office (504) 280-6799 fax (504) 280-7396 email: [email protected] PERSONAL Home Address: 1224 Lake Avenue, Apt. 313 Metairie, LA 70005 born 7 September 1953 in Columbia, Pennsylvania, USA to Harry Franklin Derstler & Hazel Kline Derstler; married 19 August 1989, Niobrara County, Wyoming, USA; divorced 19 May 1999, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA; no children BACKGROUND 1. EDUCATION Ph.D. in Geology, University of California, Davis----------------- 1985 M.S. in Geology, University of Rochester------------------------- 1977 B.A. in Geology, cum laude, Franklin & Marshall College--------------- 1975 2. EXPERIENCE A. Academic Associate Professor, Dept. Geology & Geophysics, Univ. New Orleans Director, Lance Dinosaur Project ---------------------------------------------- Assistant Professor, Dept. Geology & Geophysics, Univ. New Orleans- Associate Instructor/Teaching Assistant, Univ. California, Davis-------- Lecturer in Geology, Colgate University--------------------------------- Teaching Assistant, University of Rochester-------------------------------- B. Other Secretary and Member of the Board, Natural History Museum of Louisiana, Inc. ---------------------------------------------------------- Assistant Geologist, Haley & Aldrich, Inc. [Geotechnical Engineers]---- Driller's Helper, Rochester Drilling Co. ________ ________________ _ Student Research Associate, Smithsonian Institution (NSF URP Grant GY -10578) _________________ _______ _ Assistant to the Curator of Paleontology, North Museum ---------------- 8/88 to present 5/88 to present 8/82 to 8/88 9/78 to 5/82 1/78 to 5/78 9/75 to 12/77 6/00-present 6/77-9/78 6/76 to 7/76 6/74 to 8/74 9/72 to 5/75 Kraig Lawrence Derstler SCHOLARLY AND CREATIVE PRODUCTIVITY 1. PUBLICATIONS A. Books: --- none B. Refereed/Invited Publications a. -
Smallest Known Raptor Tracks Suggest Microraptorine Activity in Lakeshore Setting Received: 9 January 2018 Kyung Soo Kim 1, Jong Deock Lim2, Martin G
www.nature.com/scientificreports OPEN Smallest known raptor tracks suggest microraptorine activity in lakeshore setting Received: 9 January 2018 Kyung Soo Kim 1, Jong Deock Lim2, Martin G. Lockley3, Lida Xing 4, Dong Hee Kim5, Accepted: 1 November 2018 Laura Piñuela6, Anthony Romilio7, Jae Sang Yoo1, Jin Ho Kim1 & Jaehong Ahn8 Published: xx xx xxxx Ongoing studies of a multiple track-bearing horizons from massive excavations in the Jinju Formation (Lower Cretaceous) of South Korea have yielded a remarkable diversity of avian, non- avian dinosaur, pterosaur, crocodilian and mammal tracks, many very small and well preserved. Here we report diminutive, didactyl tracks (~1.0 cm long) assigned to a new dromaeosaurid ichnogenus Dromaeosauriformipes, which resembles the larger, but still quite small, ichnogenus Dromaeosauripus, also from the same formation only 30 km away. These diminutive tracks are consistent with the foot size of smaller dromaeosaurid taxa like Early Cretaceous Microraptor from China, and may represent diminutive species or juveniles of larger species. The association of tracks with lakeshore sediments is consistent with the evidence that Microraptor was a fsh eater. Two trackways and isolated tracks indicate variable trackmaker gaits and speeds. If oviparous, as assumed for most non-avian dinosaur neonates, the trackmakers must have hatched from tiny eggs. Previous studies of the Korean Cretaceous indicate the presence of other diminutive (~1.0 cm long) theropod tracks (Minisauripus). Such occurrences strongly suggest that small tracks attributed to juveniles, or very small tetrapod species, are more common than previously supposed especially where suitable preservation conditions prevailed. South Korea has become well known for the extraordinary abundance of Cretaceous vertebrate tracksites from the Gyeongsang Supergroup1, including the “Neocomian” Sindong Group and the Albian-Cenomanian Hayang Group2. -
100 Years of Managing Fossils on Federal Lands
Bulletin 34 New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science A Division of the DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS America’s Antiquities: 100 Years of Managing Fossils on Federal Lands edited by Spencer G. Lucas, Justin A. Spielmann, Patricia M. Hester, Jason P. Kenworthy and Vincent L. Santucci Albuquerque, 2006 Bulletin 34 New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science A Division of the DEPARTMENT OF CULTURAL AFFAIRS America’s Antiquities: 100 Years of Managing Fossils on Federal Lands edited by Spencer G. Lucas, Justin A. Spielmann, Patricia M. Hester, Jason P. Kenworthy and Vincent L. Santucci Printed with the support of the U.S. Government Albuquerque, 2006 STATE OF NEW MEXICO Department of Cultural Affairs Stuart Ashman, Secretary NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY AND SCIENCE Adrian P. Hunt, Ph.D., Director BOARD OF TRUSTEES Bill Richardson, Governor, State of New Mexico, ex officio Adrian P. Hunt, Ph.D., Director, ex officio Gary Friedman, President Mary B. Gavin, Emerita Peter F. Gerity, Ph.D. Jerry Langheim Laurence Lattman, Ph.D. Morton Lieberman, Ph. D. Imogene Lindsay, Emerita John Montgomery, Ph.D. Osbjorn Pearson, Ph.D. Joseph Powell, Ph.D. Alexa Tysseling Ron V. Wilmot Cover illustration: Seventh Federal Fossil Conference logo. Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in the papers of this volume are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service, U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Reclamation, or other federal agency. EDITORIAL BOARD Spencer G. Lucas, Ph.D., Managing editor Adrian P. Hunt, Ph.D. Gary S. Morgan, M.S. Justin A. -
Wednesday Morning, November 3, 2004
WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 2004 ROMER PRIZE SESSION PLAZA BALLROOM A/B MODERATORS: RYOSUKE MOTANI AND RAYMOND ROGERS 8:00 Welcome 8:15 Beck, A.: THE ORIGINS OF MAMMALIAN LOCOMOTION: NEW METHODS FOR RECONSTRUCTING POSURE IN EXTINCT NON-MAMMALIAN SYNAPSIDS BECK, Allison, Univ. of Chicago, Chicago, IL The Synapsida, composed of living mammals and their extinct ancestors, are colloquially known as the ‘mammal-like reptiles.’ The extensive fossil record captures numerous transitional forms recording the transition from Permian, reptile-like pelycosaurs to primitive therians of the Triassic. A major part of this transition involved a change from a sprawling posture to one similar to the crouched posture of living small mammals such as the opossum. Despite our understanding of the postural endpoints, the question remains: What was the locomotory posture of taxa that are phylogenetically intermediate between pelycosaurs and modern mammals? Two major notions of postural change have been proposed, both supported by functional morphologic analyses and comparison to living mammals and reptiles. One suggests that intermediate taxa were capable of a dual-gait, much like modern crocodilians. The other outlines a series of increasingly upright intermediates. Neither hypothesis has been quantitatively evaluated. Here I set up a framework for interpreting function in extinct vertebrates, and apply it to reconstructing posture in extinct non-mammalian synapsids. Linear and angular measurements were taken on the limb and girdle bones of extant iguanian and varanid lizards, crocodilians, therian mammals and monotremes, and again on fossil synapsids. Multivariate and bivariate analyses were used to correlate suites of morphologic features with posture in the living forms. -
Early- and Mid-Cretaceous Archosaur Localities of North-Central Texas
Early- and Mid-Cretaceous Archosaur Localities of North-Central Texas Guidebook for the field trip held October 13, 2015 in conjunction with the 75th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology in Dallas, Texas Field Trip Leaders: Thomas Adams, Witte Museum James Farlow, Indiana University–Purdue University Fort Wayne Christopher Noto, University of Wisconsin–Parkside Christopher Strganac, Perot Museum of Nature and Science Christopher Noto, Editor 2015 © 2015 by the authors using a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International License Early- and Mid-Cretaceous Archosaur Localities of North-Central Texas, SVP 2015 Meeting Field Trip Guidebook TABLE OF CONTENTS FIELD TRIP OVERVIEW 2 Christopher Strganac STOP 1 ARCHOSAURS OF THE LOWER CRETACEOUS TRINITY GROUP OF CENTRAL AND NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS WITH A STOP AT THE JONES 5 RANCH QUARRY Thomas L. Adams STOP 2 DINOSAUR FOOTPRINTS FROM THE GLEN ROSE FORMATION (PALUXY RIVER, DINOSAUR VALLEY STATE PARK, SOMERVELL COUNTY, 14 TEXAS) James O. Farlow, Karl T. Bates, Rena M. Bonem, Benjamin F. Dattilo, Peter L. Falkingham, Raymond Gildner, Jerry Jacene, Glen J. Kuban, Anthony J. Martin, Mike O’Brien, James Whitcraft STOPS 3 and 4 38 ARCHOSAUR FOSSIL LOCALITIES IN THE WOODBINE FORMATION (CENOMANIAN) OF NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS Christopher R. Noto Cover Image: Reconstruction of possible Paluxy River trackmakers from Dinosaur Valley State Park, based on Paluxysaurus and Acrocanthosaurus. Artwork by Mike O’Brien. Early- and Mid-Cretaceous Archosaur Localities of North-Central Texas, SVP 2015 Meeting Field Trip Guidebook ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful to William R. (Bill) and Dacie Jones for their gracious hospitality and allowing access to their ranch.