EPOD - a service of USRA
The Earth Science Picture of the Day (EPOD) highlights the diverse processes and phenomena which shape our planet and our lives. EPOD will collect and archive photos, imagery, graphics, and artwork with short explanatory
captions and links exemplifying features within the Earth system. The
community is invited to contribute digital imagery, short captions and
relevant links.
Encore - Ghost Reef Fossil Find
August 08, 2020
155-adj
NewOne
Today and every Saturday Earth Science Picture of the Day invites you
to rediscover favorites from the past. Saturday posts feature an EPOD
that was chosen by viewers like you in our monthly Viewers' Choice
polls. Join us as we look back at these intriguing and captivating
images.
Photographer: Joe Bauman
Summary Author: Joe Bauman
October 2014 Viewer's Choice
High in the mountains of Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, in
Utah’s Albion Basin, a ghost reef hunkers near a popular hiking
trail. Low boulders that represent parts of the reef were brought to my
attention by Allison Ceresa Genet -- shown in the bottom photo.
Thousands of small sharply defined remnants of creatures that lived
around 330 million years ago cover the surfaces of several boulders.
The vast majority of the figures, which are white or gray and embedded
in dark limestone, are solitary rugosan corals, according to Utah’s
state paleontologist, James I. Kirkland. Rugosan corals (horn
corals) dating to the Mississippian subperiod are found throughout
Utah. In boulders left from the ancient reef, horn coral fossils are
preserved in three dimensions; erosion cut across them directly through
the center, lengthwise or diagonally, resulting in a variety of
patterns. Depending on how Nature slices it, the corals look like
circles with spokes radiating from the middle, fluted shapes like tiny
buffalo horns, spiky vanes, icicles jutting from a semicircle or sprays
of white streaks. Other fossils -- some of which are shown here with a
coin for scale -- that are not rugosan are even more interesting:
ammonites, what looks like a small straight nautiloid, a
carapace that's similar to those of Cambrian period shrimplike
animals, a possible crinoid, and some clearly rendered but hard to
identify shapes. A few seem to show fossilized remains of soft tissue.
Horn corals and many other species were annihilated during Permian
Extinction approximately 250 million years ago.
Photo Details: Top - Camera: NIKON D70; Focal Length: 70mm (35mm
equivalent: 105mm); Aperture: f/5.6; Exposure Time: 0.0040 s (1/250);
Software: Adobe Photoshop Elements 2.0. Bottom - same except: Focal
Length: 35mm (35mm equivalent: 52mm); Aperture: f/4.2; Exposure Time:
0.0025 s (1/400).
* Albion Basin, Utah Coordinates: 40.5805, -111.6185
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Geology Links
* Earthquakes
* Geologic Time
* Geomagnetism
* General Dictionary of Geology
* Mineral and Locality Database
* Mohs Scale of Mineral Hardness
* This Dynamic Earth
* USGS
* USGS Ask a Geologist
* USGS/NPS Geologic Glossary
* USGS Volcano Hazards Program
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