Saturday, July 11, 2009

Update on Corral Bluffs Survey

I've been searching the 522 acres of Corral Bluffs Open Space for several months now. It's taken me until this past few weeks to really have a plan and a strategy. I've divided the area up into 38 sections, and then I can keep track of where I've been and where I still need to go.
I've found many species of turtles and several crocodiles. I've also found a vertebra from a champsosaurus, a creature similar to a crocodile, but more like a modern gavial (or gharial).
We've found several fossil leaf sites, and Kirk Johnson and Ian Miller from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science have been down to collect leaves several times. I'm still looking for ancient mammal fossils, but so far I haven't had any luck.
The temperature out there can be brutal. My thermometer said it was 114 degrees on the outcrop at one point on Friday. But believe it or not, by dressing right and drinking plenty of water it is actually tolerable. And I've only run into one more rattlesnake. This one I heard before I saw it. It was curled up in a hole, but the shed skin it left behind proved that it was about 4 feet long. The photo I took showed it had 9 rattles.

Friday, May 15, 2009

A Day in the field with the DMNS curators

Today was the first day Kirk Johnson and Ian Miller of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science got the chance to walk the Case Property at Corral Bluffs. It seems that everywhere they looked they found new leaf localities. Kirk said that at one site every leaf they picked up was a new species. They marked 3 or 4 new localities. Two sites are near the bottom of the section and one is at the very top and may eventually correlate with the Castle Rock rainforest site. That site is one of the sites I had found and named "Dead Batteries" due to the fact that when I found the leaves I also found out that the batteries on my gps and my camera were dead.

Ken Weissenburger also found what appears to be a small crocodile skull, with various other bones. The DMNS crew may come back to take it out.

When I got home I found that I had a 6 inch hole in the seat of my old favorite field pants! I hope I was walking in back of the group most of the day...

Monday, April 27, 2009

First of fossils are in the Denver Museum

The first batch of fossils from Corral Bluffs have been accessioned into the Denver Museum of Nature & Science collections. I met with Kirk Johnson and Ian Miller today and turned in locality information along with the fossils. Darn, I miss my humerus! Now I'll just have to find the rest of the turtle to go with it!

Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Rattlesnakes are Awake



My son Patrick and I went out for a brief tour of Corral Bluffs this afternoon. I knew it was about the right time, and my hunch was confirmed when Patrick said, "Oh, here's a snake skin or a dead snake, or, wait a minute..." I had stepped on a baby rattlesnake about 10 inches long. It looked rather squished, but after poking it with a stick we found out that it seemed to be fine. A short way away I found several fossil bones, so the new locality name is, naturally, "Squished Rattler." I don't know for sure what the bones are, but my first guess is crocodile. They don't quite look turtlish. The Bluffs are looking beautiful. Green leaves are beginning to appear. I decided I am Lewis and/or Clark, describing a new land. So I am creating names for every place. The spot I named today is Windswept Hollow. It's at the top of a bluff, with views of Pikes Peak and the Sangres and beautiful pinnacles and bowls of sandstone.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Corral Bluffs progress

Our study of the new Corral Bluffs property, formerly known as the Case Property, has begun. This is a project of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science (DMNS). Ken Weissenburger and I will be documenting the stratigraphy to connect the Case Property strata with that in Jimmy Camp Creek Park. The importance of that connection is to try to document where the K/T boundary is. Scientists at DMNS have documented within several meters where the boundary is. This means the rock in Jimmy Camp is below the K/T boundary, while the rock in Corral Bluffs is above the Cretaceous extinction. We will also document and collect fossils. We are especially hoping to find fossils of early mammals, as this is one of only a very few places on earth that contain fossils of mammals during the first million years after the extinction of dinosaurs.

Corral Bluffs is an area of subtle beauty. The landscape is basically monochromatic, shades of grays and browns. At first glance the area seems to be much the same wherever you look. but upon closer examination there is a great deal of variety. Each gulley and crest has its own personality, containing surprises only visible when the visitor slows down to observe closely. The layers of rock are actually quite different from one another; some are silt and clay; some are poorly cemented sandstones and some are conglomeratic. Some layers contain hundreds of fossilized twigs while others contain enormous fossil trees. Layers of red, round concretions resembling bowling balls lay on top of sandstone benches, resembling photos of a Martian landscape. The soft sands hold the tracks of modern inhabitants: coyotes, mice, and birds, although seldom do you see the owners of those footprints. This is a land where the ancient and the modern come together. Birds of prey perch upon the fossilized trees while rodents throw crocodile bones out of their burrows.

The views from the tops of the bluffs are spectacular. Pikes Peak looms above the plains with the city hidden in the valley between the bluffs and the mountains. The Sangre de Cristo Range pierces the sky and the Spanish Peaks stand alone to the south. Corral Bluffs is truly a place of peace and solitude, and a place to reaquaint yourself with nature.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Red Rock Canyon Dinosaur Track

On October 31 I was in Red Rock Canyon with two members of WIPS (Western Interior Paleontological Society). We were attempting to make molds and casts of dino tracks and other fossils found in the outcrops that can't be collected. Happily, we were met by a most friendly park ranger, who drove us near the outcrop, allowing us to avoid carrying the 12 foot ladder an extra mile. We still, however, had to carry the ladder up the steep hogback, through cactus and talus. We didn't have much luck with the casting of the tracks. The iguanodon track was too deep and the foam casting material broke into about 40 pieces! We got a nice cast of the ankylosaur track, but (unknown to my wonderful WIPS friends) as soon as I got home to admire the cast, my cat jumped on top of the foam, leaving four well-formed cat tracks on top of the ankylosaur track.

All was not lost, though! As we were leaving the outcrop, one fellow fossil lover looked down in a pile of talus, left from when Red Rock Canyon was a quarry, and saw laying there a dinosaur track cast that had fallen off of its original outcrop. What an exciting find. I can only think that the quarry men tossed it there as they were removing the preferred sections of rock, not realizing what it was. I have stepped over that same spot, not noticing the track, for over two years!

The best fossils collected from Red Rock Canyon will be displayed at the Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum beginning later this month. Hopefully the ankylosaur track will be among those fossils!