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Thursday, August 2, 2018

The Good Old Days


This week’s adventure takes a peek at the past. Earth was a vastly different place in the good old days. Dinosaurs ruled and everything was just a bigger, sabre-toothed version of the critters we have today. OK, maybe not the bigger, pointier critters. But scientists can tell us a lot about the way things used to be by looking at the fossil record.
Fossils are like prehistoric pictures. They form when dead organic material is slowly replaced by mineral material. Not everything that ever died was destined to become a fossil; only in certain conditions could the transition take place. Being in a situation without oxygen would’ve helped your cause if you were hoping to fossilize. Oxygen is a requirement for decomposition. If you’re decomposing, you won’t leave behind anything to fossilize. 
Little worm fossils imprinted on a rock


Usually when you think of fossils you think of huge dinosaur bones. There are other types of fossils too. Footprints in dried mud that later turned to stone can be found in Alaska and Africa.
Dinosaur footprint found at Denali National Park (NPS)
Imprints of shells in rock are mountains that used to be sea floor. One wound up in my back yard in Pennsylvania. One day a dead plant was buried in between layers of sediment that hardened into rock. Years later, I squeezed that rock and found black images of that plant inside the rock. Whole trees can be fossilized into petrified wood. Ancient insects trapped in tree sap that hardened into amber are also fossils.
A rock full of shells from my back yard

Plant fossils inside a piece of sedimentary rock

If you want to find some fossils, you don’t need to be a paleontologist or geologist. All it takes is a little luck and some sedimentary rock. Igneous rock is volcanic in nature, so that won’t be likely to preserve any critters. Metamorphic rock is rock that has changed from heat and pressure, so no luck there either. But sedimentary rock is just dirt that compacted into rocks. If you go on a fossil hunt, respect private property and remember not to take anything from or do any damage to national parks.
Petrified wood- looking at the rough bark

Petrified wood- look closely and you can see the grains

Ant trapped in amber (Smithsonian)


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