Wonderful West Virginia Magazine



Similar documents
Hanover Point (Isle of Wight) fossils

Adapted from Stone Girl Bone Girl by Laurence Anholt, Francis Lincoln Children s Book

Chapter 9: Earth s Past

Geologic Time Scale Newcomer Academy Visualization Three

The Fossil Record and Geologic Time Scale

GEOL 104 Dinosaurs: A Natural History Geology Assignment. DUE: Mon. Sept. 18

Dinosaur Vocabulary List & Definitions

Geologic History Review

Geology Merit Badge Workbook

CRETACEOUS ALBERTA SCIENCE HALL. Changing Earth. What is Palaeontology. Changing Time. 1. This exhibit is based on a discovery made in

Sedimentary Rock Formation Models. 5.7 A Explore the processes that led to the formation of sedimentary rock and fossil fuels.

Carbonate Rock Formation

ROCKS, FOSSILS AND SOILS SECTION 8: FOSSILS From Hands on Science by Linda Poore, 2003

Evolution (18%) 11 Items Sample Test Prep Questions

The rock cycle. Introduction. What are rocks?

Dinosaurs and Fossils

What are Rocks??? Rocks are the most common material on Earth. They are a naturally occurring collection of one or more minerals.

Mini Dinosaurs. Grades K 1 2. Compiled by

What is a Fossil? Adapted from What is a Fossil MOR Dinosaur Trunk Activity

FORENSIC GEOLOGY GEOLOGIC TIME AND GEOLOGIC MAPS

Geologic Time. Relative Dating. Principle of Original Horizontality. Relative Time. Absolute Time. Geologic Column

Name: LAB: The Geologic Time Scale

SEDIMENTARY ROCKS. Sedimentary rocks are formed near or at the surface of the earth.

Rocks and Minerals What is right under your feet?

Programmes for schools at The Dorman Museum

Kilkenny Castle Trail Background Information

The Milwaukee Public Museum optional extra credit assignment

Darwin 2009: Natural Selection

3 The Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras

WEATHERING, EROSION, AND DEPOSITION PRACTICE TEST. Which graph best shows the relative stream velocities across the stream from A to B?

THE WATER CYCLE. Ecology

LESSON PLAN FOR ROCKS AND MINERALS. Episode Six 306 Street Science (Earth Science)

Lesson Title: Kincaid Creatures Subject: Texas history, science, math By: Carol Schlenk. Grade level: 7 th (Can be modified for 4 th grade)

The Dawn of Diversity

FROM SEDIMENT INTO SEDIMENTARY ROCK. Objectives. Sediments and Sedimentation

Broadmoor Public Golf Course TREE MANAGEMENT GUIDE

[chime plays] [music plays]

The Formation of Fossil Fuels

Mud in the Water. Oklahoma Academic Standards. Objective. Background. Resources Needed. Activities

RESTORATION & REVITALIZATION

What is a rock? How are rocks classified? What does the texture of a rock reveal about how it was formed?

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

Ch6&7 Test. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

How To Plan A Buffer Zone

All sediments have a source or provenance, a place or number of places of origin where they were produced.

PUSD High Frequency Word List

IN A SMALL PART OF THE CITY WEST OF

NATURAL REGIONS OF KENTUCKY

How can you tell rocks apart?

Tales. Tommy Goes to Ireland BOOK 15

Get to Know Your Watershed. McMillan Creek

Sedimentary Rocks Practice Questions and Answers Revised September 2007

3.1 Measuring Biodiversity

archaeologist artifact WC-1

7) A clastic sedimentary rock composed of rounded to subrounded gravel is called a A) coal. B) shale. C) breccia.

Your guide to home maintenance. Flat Roofs

2. You are going to be reading about one type of dinosaur called Tyrannosaurus rex or T. rex for short. What do you know about this dinosaur?

First Certificate in English

Natural surface water on earth includes lakes, ponds, streams, rivers, estuaries, seas and oceans.

Kenan Fellowship Earth Science Project Teacher s Guide. Developed by Bruce Boller. Bertie High School

1 Branches of Earth Science

You re One in Seven Billion!

WHEN GOD MADE EVERYTHING

Continents join together and split apart.

Houses of Prehistoric Ohio

A History and Overview of the Barnett Shale

Session No Tuesday, 3 November 2015: 8:00 AM- 12:00 PM.

Investigating Adaptations

Chapter 9 Asteroids, Comets, and Dwarf Planets. Their Nature, Orbits, and Impacts

Interpretive Elements

BRITISH GEOLOGICAL SURVEY

Fry Phrases Set 1. TeacherHelpForParents.com help for all areas of your child s education

Objective: God has a Plan! Bible Memory Verse: Jeremiah 29:11 For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans THEME OVERVIEW

Carbon-14 Dating. or, How Old Are Those M&Ms? Number of Undecayed M&Ms

Topics: The Petroleum System. Origin of Petroleum. Arguments for biogenic origin. Google search : Origin of Petroleum : Hugoton Gas Field (Kansas)

Introducing SEA LIFE centre Children s Activity Packs

Creation. Then God spoke and Creation came into being. God formed everything: Creation Week God called all that He had created good.

TABLE OF CONTENTS CURRICULUM AND LESSON PLANS

Dino Data Adapted from Dino Data Activity

Mission 4: Fossil Fuel Power Stations

Climate, Vegetation, and Landforms

to examine in order to note the similarities or differences. an amount, extent, or size determined by measuring.

What s It All About? The Sun as a Power Source Instructor Guide

FIRST GRADE ROCKS 2 WEEKS LESSON PLANS AND ACTIVITIES

Dinosaur Time-line. What other animals lived then? How long ago did the dinosaurs live? Did dinosaurs live at the same time as people?

Lecture Outlines PowerPoint. Chapter 11 Earth Science, 12e Tarbuck/Lutgens

Focus Questions: How can using the scientific method help me to understand the effects of ocean acidification on seashells?

Residential Foundations and Basements

Exploring How Rocks Are Formed

Igneous rocks formed when hot molten material (magma) cools and hardens (crystallizes).

Rocks & Minerals. 10. Which rock type is most likely to be monomineralic? 1) rock salt 3) basalt 2) rhyolite 4) conglomerate

Unit 5: Formation of the Earth

Evolutionary Evidence

Geology. Administered by the Department of Physical Sciences within the College of Arts and Sciences.

Storytelling + young learners + limited vocabulary?

Transcription:

4 WONDERFUL WEST VIRGINIA JULY 2015

TREASURES in the Rock Fossils in West Virginia are 400-million-year-old relics from an unimaginable time. WRITTEN BY HOPE HART PHOTOGRAPHED BY KATIE GRIFFITH WONDERFULWV.COM 5

S tanding off to the side of a curved road, Robert Peck s eyes are sharp and curious as he examines the outcrop in front of him. With dirt and gravel crunching beneath his boots, he walks closer to the formidable crag. The rock bed stands tall, boasting layer upon layer of stacked limestone, dusty from erosion and dotted with vegetation. Lowering to his hands and knees, Peck inspects the pieces of rock that have fallen to the bottom of the outcrop. Picking one up, he brushes dust off the uneven surface of a shell imprint. His suspicions are confirmed he has found a fossil. Peck, from Hinton, has always been a collector. When a house fire in 1992 destroyed the prized stamp collection he started with his father as a child, he was at a loss for how to fill the void, and his collecting instincts lay dormant. Then, in 1999, when he was teaching physical sciences at Concord University in Athens, West Virginia, he went on a geology field trip. Suddenly everything just clicked, Peck says. You see this rock outcrop, you look closely, and you begin to recognize that it s not just a rock outcrop, there are fossils here. You realize, Hey, these are creatures. A self-proclaimed child at heart, Peck began seriously hunting and collecting fossils after that first trip, fueled by his insatiable curiosity. His basement began to fill with fossils. I got so many, I realized it was more than a collection, it was a research collection. I thought I was finding things no one had seen before, Peck says. In 2005, while collecting in Mercer County, near Oakvale, he found a rostroconch, a type of extinct mollusk. Similar to a small clam with two symmetrical ribbed shells, it was a newly discovered species of rostroconchia, and Peck published his find in the Journal of Paleontology that same year. The specimens are now resting in the reserve collections at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. You see something that looks a little different than the other rocks, and once you start recognizing them, you find amazing things. It s the history of life on earth, Peck says. After his first discovery, he made another, this time a new species of non-marine tubeworm curled in a fossilized coil. Peck s fossils are currently in museum reserves around the world, including the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh and the Peabody Museum at Yale University in Connecticut. These organisms lived when the state was once covered by a shallow sea about 500 million years ago, making West Virginia a rich source of marine invertebrate fossils and corals. Plant fossils can be found along the coal seams that weave throughout the state and in shale deposits that also boast the remains of marine organisms like trilobites and snails. In limestone, a collector can find fossils of marine life that lived in shallow waters, including the most abundant animal fossil in West Virginia, a type of extinct marine invertebrate called a brachiopod. 6 WONDERFUL WEST VIRGINIA JULY 2015 Brachiopod fossils found in the state can be anywhere from 350 to 425 million years old. Their small, textured shells have been preserved by layers of sediment deposits that covered the organism on the ancient seafloor as the waters retreated over time. After millions of years the sediment compressed and hardened into rock. You re looking at fossils that were originally alive on the seabottom and, for the most part, where you find them is where they died, says Ron McDowell, a senior research geologist at the West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey in Morgantown. McDowell recommends looking for brachiopods near Elkins along the state highway Corridor H, also known as U.S. Route 48. As long as you park safely off the highway, collectors can go right up to the ancient rock to find samples. Just north of Elkins sits a two-mile stretch of outcrops where many fossils and a thrilling variety of rock layers are exposed. The rocks are sitting at about a 50- or 60-degree angle, which means you can

TOP LEFT, TOP RIGHT, AND BOTTOM LEFT: AMY KOWINSKY (3), FOSSILGUY.COM Fossils of prehistoric creatures are found in a number of locations across the state by explorers such as Jayson Kowinsky. Fossil types include plants and animals like trilobites, brachiopods, and ancient corals. walk all the way along the outcrop and you go through rock bed after rock bed it s beautiful exposure, McDowell says. Jayson Kowinsky, an experienced fossil collector from Pittsburgh who has traveled the world for his hobby, visits West Virginia yearly to look for specimens to add to his collection. He recommends taking a scenic drive to the Eastern Panhandle of the state on West Virginia State Route 29. On that route, between the towns of Delray and Rio, road cuts have exposed the Mahantango Formation, an approximately 390-million-year-old siltstone and shale layer that sits right on top of the Marcellus Shale. Here, Kowinsky says, it s as simple as flipping over a few rocks to find a brachiopod or two. Another roadside quarry sits near the Lost River just west of Wardensville on West Virginia Route 55 where you can find corals and trilobites. Deciduous and coniferous trees alike provide some shade for the dusty limestone walls, making the area a great location to fossil hunt. Make sure to look at the rock that has already fallen. Especially in the early spring, after the winter erosion, you ll find fossils that have fallen off at the bottom, Kowinsky says. Equipped with nothing but a rock hammer, safety goggles, and a magnifying glass, the amateur fossil collector can visit these sites and find prehistoric treasures of their own. Since rock formations can be fragile, collectors advise parking safely off of roads and highways but not so close to the outcrops that tumbling rocks can hit your car. Avoid interstates and opt to travel the many smaller state and county roads that will provide a more scenic adventure, being mindful of private property. The preparation and precautions necessary to fossil hunt are worth the experience. The best part of fossil hunting is you never know what you are going to find you never know what s in the rock. One day you might not find anything, and the next day you find something and you are calling a museum, Kowinsky says. He, like Peck, has fossils in museum collections. Today s collectors follow a pastime rooted in the state s long fossil history. WONDERFULWV.COM 7

West Virginia University s fossil collection includes a number of local specimens like these corals. 8 WONDERFUL WEST VIRGINIA JULY 2015

Mont Chateau s Museum Mont Chateau sits above Cheat Lake outside Morgantown, the site of the former Mont Chateau State Park. But since the 1970s, the site has been home to the West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey s Museum of Geology and Natural History, the only complete dinosaur skeleton in the state, and, more recently, a complete replica skeleton of the official state fossil. The actual Jefferson bones of the Megalonyx jeffersonii are in Philadelphia, and almost no one is allowed to see those, says museum curator, geologist, paleontologist, and fossil-lover Ray Garton the man who was instrumental in getting the fossil state recognition. But we have replicas of the actual bones. Now we have a full-size skeleton, about 8 feet tall. The installation opened in June 2015, and Garton expects it to stick around for at least several months. We may try to take it on the road to make sure more people in the state can see it, he says. Most people, even geology buffs like Garton, usually find small aquatic invertebrate fossils. To find something as big as the M. jeffersonii is rare. Occasionally we find some vertebrate animal bones, but we usually don t find complete skeletons just fragments, Garton says. Garton encourages hobbyists to contact him with their finds to help identify the creatures unearthed from road cuts, caves, and construction sites and to add to the scientific body of knowledge about where these prehistoric plants and animals were located. A few years ago we found bones of giant prehistoric fish in Elkins. None had been found in West Virginia before, and we found definite evidence that they were here. In 1796, prehistoric animal bones were found in a cave in what is now Monroe County and sent to Thomas Jefferson at Monticello in Virginia. Jefferson was an avid paleontologist at the time. Described as the Bones of a Tremendous Animal of the Clawed kind by Colonel John Stuart, the pioneering western Virginia explorer who discovered them, the large, terrifying claw-like fossils were first believed to be from a giant extinct species of lion and were a major discovery in North America. Later identified as the remnants of a 35,000-year-old giant ground sloth, the fossil was officially named Megalonyx jeffersonii, meaning great claw, and became West Virginia s state fossil in 2008. One of the greatest thrills of looking for fossils is knowing you are the first person on the face of the planet to see these things and hold them in your hand, Peck says. That s the fascination in fossil hunting. Robert Peck s home fossil collection includes fossils like a pecten, a 325-million-yearold scallop. Many fossils found by hobbyists aren t much larger than a penny. For more information on local fossil hunting, contact the West Virginia Fossil Club and other local organizations. COURTESY OF RAY GARTON TOP AND MIDDLE LEFT: ROBERT PECK (2) Email Ray Garton at garton@prehistoricplanet.com WONDERFULWV.COM 9