inyo
noticing nice landscape pebbles
Member since September 2014
Posts: 85
|
Post by inyo on Jan 13, 2018 13:18:09 GMT -5
Not long ago, I uploaded my latest fossils-related page: Dinosaur-Age Fossil Leaves At Del Puerto Canyon, California. It's a field trip--with detailed text, on-site images, and photographs of fossil specimens--to a fossil leaf locality in the upper Cretaceous portion of the upper Cretaceous to Paleocene Moreno Formation near the western edge of California's Great Central Valley.
Of course, the world-famous Moreno Formation produces California's recently established State Dinosaur (formally recognized in September, 2017), a hadrosaur duckbill herbivore called Augustynolophus morrisi. The Moreno also contains mosasaurs and plesiosaurs (marine reptiles), plus beaucoup ammonites, gastropods, and pelecypods.
A fascinating paleontological side-story here is that sophisticated high resolution stratigraphic sampling of Moreno Formation foraminfera (tiny shells secreted by a microscopic single-celled organism)--exquisitely sensitive time indicators that lived and died during specific, restricted moments in geologic time--proves that during deposition of the Moreno Formation, the hadrosaur dinosaurs went extinct a full 1.23 million years before the infamous meteorite impact of 66 million years ago that many investigators identify as the kill-shot which ended the dinosaurian dynasty on Earth. Too, that same microfossil foraminifer study demonstrated that the Moreno mosasaurs went belly-up, extinct, 158,000 years prior to that K-T boundary bolide collision with Earth--an event which created the infamous Chicxulub crater beneath the present-day Yucatan Peninsula.
|
|
Sabre52
Cave Dweller
Me and my gal, Rosie
Member since August 2005
Posts: 20,487
|
Post by Sabre52 on Jan 13, 2018 14:35:04 GMT -5
Very cool article. Been all over that area and never hunted fossils. Sorry I missed the chance....Mel
|
|