84 AGS Abstracts – 2006 Annual General Meeting Dinosaurs, deserts and volcanoes: the creation of a series of paintings depicting scenes from the Mesozoic Fundy Basin of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick Rob Fensome1, Judi Pennanen2, Tim Fedak3, Andrew MacRae4, Paul Olsen5, John Wade6, Graham Williams6, Ken Adams7, Jennifer Bates6, Dave Brown8, Howard Falcon-Lang9, Kathy Goodwin7, Randy Miller10, Georgia Pe-Piper4, and Deborah Skilliter11 1. Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada (Atlantic), P.O. Box 1006, Dartmouth, NS, B2Y 4A2 <[email protected]> ¶ 2. 44 Queensbury Drive, Quispamsis, NB, E2E 4W3 ¶ 3. Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, B3H 4J1 ¶ 4. Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, NS, B3H 3C3 ¶ 5. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, New York, 10964, USA ¶ 6. Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada (Atlantic), P.O. Box 1006, Dartmouth, NS, B2Y 4A2 ¶ 7. Fundy Geological Museum, Two Islands Road, Parrsboro, NS, B0M 1S0 ¶ 8. Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board, 6th Floor TD Centre, 1791 Barrington Street, Halifax, NS, B3J 3K9 ¶ 9. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1RJ, UK ¶ 10. New Brunswick Museum, 277 Douglas Avenue, Saint John, NB, E2K 1E5 ¶ 11. Nova Scotia Museum, 1747 Summer Street, Halifax, NS, B3H 3A6 A team consisting of an artist (JP) and numerous geologists (the rest of us) has created a series of fi ve paintings, mostly watercolours. Four of the images represent the four prin- cipal Fundy Basin formations (Wolfville, Blomidon, North Mountain Basalt and McCoy Brook) that are collectively the late Triassic to earliest Jurassic Fundy Group. The fi fth painting dramatically portrays Canada’s oldest confi rmed dinosaur. The geologists on the team represent various specialities, such as sedimentology, vertebrate paleontology, paleobotany and vol- canology. The principal challenge was to construct a coherent vision of what the Mesozoic Fundy region looked like based on accurate scientifi c observations and information, and convey that vision to the hands of the artist. In building the images, evidence from Fundy Group rocks was used wherever possible. All the terrestrial and aquatic vertebrates shown are based on known skeletons or footprints. The dinosaur that peers at us through 200 million years in the fi fth painting represents a new genus of prosauropod, several skeletons of which have recently been found in the McCoy Brook Formation at Wasson Bluff, near Parrsboro. As for aerial vertebrates, although no evidence for pterosaurs has been found in the Fundy Group, we decided that, as these fl ying reptiles had evolved by Blomidon times, we could indulge in a couple of these exotic creatures. Despite common root casts locally in some horizons, very few well- preserved plant fossils have been found in the Fundy Group – discoveries are limited to a few ferns and sparse spores and pollen; hence, coeval forms known from elsewhere had to be used to portray the fl ora. Beyond fossils, structural geology suggested major landscape features such as the bluffs along the Atlantic Geology, 2006, Volume 42, Number 1 Copyright © 2015 Atlantic Geology Atlantic Geology 85 Cobequid Fault. Sedimentology provided us with evidence for braided streams, playa lakes, alluvial fans, sedimentary struc- tures such as mud cracks, and other features. Close study of images of modern lava lakes and fountains provided inspiration for the North Mountain Basalt painting. Although paintings representing the other three formations are not intended to be location specifi c (other than within the Fundy Basin), for the McCoy Brook painting we couldn’t resist an attempt at portrayal of the Wasson Brook locality: the structural re-entrant seen in the modern bluffs is represented by a small tributary valley of the main basin, and the talus slope, dunes, braided stream, foreground lake and boulders at the foot of the cliffs are all based on evidence from the rocks. The fauna, too, refl ects accurately the fossil fi nds at Wasson Bluff. Funding for the project was supplied by the Atlantic Geoscience Society and the Canadian Geological Foundation. The paintings belong to the Atlantic Geoscience Society and will be on display at the Fundy Geological Museum. Reproductions of the images are available for educational purposes. .
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