Saturday, November 24, 2018

Houston Museum of Natural Science

Houston Museum of Natural Science

Thanksgiving with family in Texas means a trip to the Houston Museum of Natural Science.


I love natural history museums. LOVE them. I grew up in Wisconsin, and every few months we would make a weekend trip to Chicago to visit the Field Museum, along with its neighbors, the Shedd Aquarium and the Adler Planetarium.


The current star resident of the Field is SUE, a very large and very complete Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton. (And very expensive; Disney and McDonald’s helped the Field buy the specimen to keep it accessible to the public and to scientific researchers, rather than allowing it to disappear into a private collection.) When I was a kid, the Field was in pre-SUE days, but I still adored the museum—the gems and minerals, the dioramas of taxidermied mounts, the soaring foyer like a cathedral.


When/if I can ever retire, I want to spend my retirement traveling the world, visiting natural history museums.

The paleontology section of HMNS is arranged chronologically by geographic era. I like that; it appeals to my sense of organization. So you start with very early life in the form of stromatolites, footstool-shaped structures created by blue-green algae. Then to the Cambrian with a really phenomenal collection of trilobites (~500 million years ago), then to the Permian, when the world was populated by weird synapsids—ancestors of mammals—like sail-backed Dimetrodon and saber-tooth gorgons. The Permian ended with a mass extinction bigger than the mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs: 90-95% of terrestrial and marine species vanished. Then the exhibit moves on to marine reptiles, dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and then to the Cenozoic (modern era). Someday, I need to go spend a day at the museum by myself. My family left me behind in the Permian.


This trilobite's eyes are pyritized: replaced by pyrite (fool's gold). Isn't that cool?


Trilobites

Dimetrodon - Not a Dinosaur!

Saber-tooth gorgon, from way before the time of dinosaurs.


Petrified wood, geologist for scale.


Humungous crinoid, teenager for scale.


"Wyrex" the bobtail T. rex. Someone chomped off the back half of his tail. The bones do not show signs of healing, so the wound may have been fatal. (Certainly there would have been a lot of hemorrhage from a traumatic amputation of that hugely muscular tail!)

Quetzalcoatlus had a 35-foot wingspan!


Near the main entrance is the Curator’s Choice, which features some of the recent acquisitions. The museum acquires 3,000-5,000 items every year for research or future exhibitions. Cool objects include birds carved from sperm whale teeth, and a fossilized Jurassic jellyfish.







A special exhibit at the museum is called Death By Natural Causes, which features all the exciting ways that nature wants to kill you, including toxic minerals, venomous animals, poisonous plants and fungi, epidemics, and attacks by large angry creatures.  


Hippopotamuses can kill you. Look at those teeth! (Behind the hippo is an armadillo; they kill you by transmitting leprosy.)

Uranium glass under UV light

Deadly pigments

This dress is gorgeous but the green dye is copper arsenite, which could give the wearer arsenic poisoning.

Snakebite mechanics


Another area of the museum is put together to replicate the Cabinet of Curiosity that Ferrante Imperato assembled in 1599; Cabinets of Curiosity were eclectically jumbled assortments of natural history specimens collected by wealthy European travelers.




And so much more!

Shells!

Rocks and minerals!

A giant squid model!

Live butterflies!


Monday, November 5, 2018

Behind the Scenes 2018

It's Behind the Scenes Weekend at the Natural History Museum of Utah.

Yesterday I spent four hours talking about ammonites. (Since my expertise is in living mammals, not extinct cephalopods, I had to do some quick googling at the start!) The best part was talking to kids. I figured I had 30-60 seconds per kid to awaken their curiosity about the natural world, to spark an interest in science, to teach them that science matters. Extinct animals matter. Geologic time matters. Facts matter. Some kids weren't into the ammonites so we talked about dinosaurs instead. I learned that every kid, even a two-year-old for whom English is not their first language, will smile and answer when asked, "What's your favorite dinosaur?"





Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Dinosaur Diamond Road Trip in Utah and Colorado

Dinosaur Diamond Road Trip


Utah and Colorado have both recognized the Dinosaur Diamond National Scenic Byway, but I had a hard time finding much information online to plan our trip. So, after the trip, I decided to make this blog; I hope it may provide useful information for other people planning dinosaur road trips.
Roar! Tyrannosaurus rex at Moab Giants
Who I am: I’m a veterinarian and volunteer fossil preparator in the paleontology lab at the Natural History Museum of Utah on the University of Utah campus. My partner is a geologist. My kids are ages 12 (loves dinos!) and 14 (often way too cool to be seen enjoying anything, but secretly likes dinos).

Disclaimers:

  • Information current as of summer 2018.
  • The author of this blog is not responsible for anyone getting lost, injured, maimed, dehydrated, or suffering any other sort of malady or misfortune, including death or dismemberment.
  • Take water: 1 gallon per person per day.
  • Wear sunscreen.
  • Some of the sites are reached via dirt roads which may be impassable due to weather and/or may require 4WD.

Recommended reading and further sources:

Cruisin’ the Fossil Freeway,” by Kirk Johnson (paleontologist) and Ray Troll (artist), Fulcrum Publishing, 2007, ISBN 978-1555914516. Johnson and Troll took a meandering road trip all over the West, hitting paleontologic sites.
My Beloved Brontosaur,” by Brian Switek (science writer), Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013, ISBN 978-0374135065. Switek lives in Utah and has insight into Utah paleo sites.
Dinosaur Diamond,” unfortunately not updated since 2010.
Dinosaur Diamond Prehistoric Highway,” National Geographic, May 2015. The article describes the byway well, but some locations and links are outdated.
Discover Moab dinosaur page, 2018.
Utah.com dinosaur information, 2018.
Utah Friends of Paleontology Recommended Links, 2018.
Utah Geologic Survey Visitor Information Guide to Fossils in Utah, 2018.



The Dinosaur Diamond is named for a roughly diamond-shaped path including Vernal, UT, Grand Junction, CO, Moab, UT, and Price, UT, as its corners. All feature dinosaur attractions, including museums, quarries, and tracksites. We did the loop in six days, but you could do fewer or more days. The articles I read before the trip mostly talked of going counterclockwise around the loop, starting at Moab. We decided to go clockwise, starting in Vernal.
Map from National Geographic article

Vernal, Utah


Vernal folks seem pretty proud of their dinosaur history. There’s a large pink roadside sauropod holding a sign that says, “Vernal: Utah’s Dinosaur Land,” as well as a large green roadside T. rex wearing a cowboy hat.


Utah Field House of Natural History State Park Museum
496 East Main Street
Vernal, UT 84078-2605
(435) 789-3799
Summer hours (7 days a week) 9-5

The museum features an articulated Diplodocus in the lobby, extensive fossils arranged by geologic era, and an outdoor garden of life-size prehistoric beasts. Fossils include large Uintatheres (big Eocene saber-toothed herbivorous mammals), trilobites, ammonites, and a whorl of teeth from a prehistoric chainsaw shark. Life-size reconstructions include a mammoth with hemp hair, Edaphosaurus (not a dinosaur but a sail-finned mammal-like synapsid), orange Utahraptor, Permian-era therapsid Moschops (like a cow-frog combination, related to mammals), and a derpy T. rex. The science is good overall, although some of the life-size outdoor beasts date from the fat, lazy, tail-dragging genre of dinosaur reconstruction. The museum also has a small exhibit of paintings by Ernest Untermann, with subjects from Utah landscapes to dinos to Pleistocene mammals, and a room of fluorescent minerals.

Entertaining Untermann painting (1940's-50's)

Friendly Diplodocus

Stegosaurus

Geriatric Haplocanthosaurus showing significant arthritis

Uintatherium 
Wall of Eocene fossils

Battling Uintatheres

Mammoth

Protorohippus

Sabertoothed cat, Smilodon californicus

Ammonite

Utahraptor

Edaphosaurus (not a dinosaur but a synapsid like us)

Whorl of teeth from can-opener shark, Helicoprion

Trilobites

Deep time

Diplodocus in the entrance hall

Tail-dragging Tyrannosaurus threatening Triceratops

Derpy T. rex

Derpy Diplodocus

Fluorescent minerals

Recommended for lunch or dinner; it’s right across the street from the Field House (you can see the derpy T.rex from the patio). It’s family-friendly and offers a variety of locally brewed beers, including Allosaurus Amber Ale.
(435) 781-2337
55 S. 500 E.
Vernal, Utah 84078

From Vernal, we headed east on Hwy 40 a short way to Jensen, and from there north on Hwy 149 into Dinosaur National Monument. The Monument extends across Utah and Colorado; the dinosaur parts are only in the western (Utah) portion, but there are nice views and trails in the eastern (Colorado) portion. The Monument has several campgrounds; some accept reservations, including the Green River Campground in the Utah portion, where we camped two nights.

Quarry Visitor Center
Summer hours (7 days a week) 8-6
11625 E 1500 S
Jensen, UT 84035
(435) 781-7700
Quarry Exhibit Hall
Summer hours (7 days a week) 8-5:30

The Visitor Center is a small building, with basic information, gift shop, bathrooms and water. From there, get on the shuttle bus to take you up the cliff to the Quarry Exhibit Hall. The quarry is really impressive. This bone field was discovered in 1909 by a Carnegie-financed expedition and has yielded huge numbers of bones. The building faces a wall of fossils still in place—the wall is only a portion of the original quarry, and is still full of scattered bones after specimens were removed to museums all over the world. The quarry is in the Morrison Formation, a geologic formation dating to the late Jurassic, around 149 million years ago. Dinosaurs that have been discovered include Apatosaurus, Diplodocus, Barosaurus, Camarasaurus, Allosaurus fragilis (Utah's State Fossil), Torvosaurus, and Stegosaurus. There’s also an exhibit of Allosaurus jimmadseni, discovered elsewhere in the park and named after Utah’s first state paleontologist, the late Jim Madsen.
Jumbled bones

Camarasaurus

It's difficult to convey just how huge the bone wall is

Just a small piece of the bone wall

Two femora, probably around five feet long each

Nearly complete skeleton of a juvenile Camarasaurus

Allosaurus

Daily there is a ranger-led walking tour from the quarry back down to the visitor center (the Fossil Discovery trail is also available at all times without a ranger). The walking tour passes through geologic time, from the whitish sea-bed Stump Formation (163 million years old, with clam fossils; ichthyosaurs, belemnites, and ammonites have also been found here) to the red-grey river-bed Morrison Formation (150 million years old; with sauropod vertebrae and femur visible still in the ground) to the grey volcanic ash Mowry Formation (93 million years old; with fish scale fossils). There are also a few Fremont petroglyphs on the fossil trail.
The Quarry Exhibit Hall

Fossil clams in Stump Formation rock

Sauropod femur in place in the rock

Petroglyph of a lizard

Elsewhere in the Monument are more extensive petroglyphs: people, big horn sheep, aliens???, abstract patterns, lizards, goats, etc. Some are pictographs—painted with natural pigments—with red and orange bands on their chests.
Fremont petroglyphs

Dude with antennae

Pictographs


After the second night camping in the western half of Dinosaur NM, we packed up and crossed the border into Colorado via Hwy 40. Dinosaur, CO, is a little town with more roadside dinos, including a distraught-looking Pachycephalosaurus and an aerial pterosaur skeleton. Just east of Dinosaur, turn north to go into the Colorado half of the monument, which has a nice scenic drive up to Harpers Corner. It’s a deserted stretch of road (watch out for sheep and cattle in the road), and at the end are hiking trails leading to fossil brachiopods.
Pachycephalosaurus

Pterosaur
On the Harpers Corner road

Big Daddy Bull

Harpers Corner overlook to the Green River

Mule deer
From Dinosaur, CO, head south to Fruita and Grand Junction via highways 64 & 139. The road goes through Canyon Pintado National Historic District, which has Fremont petroglyphs and a nice view from the aspen-covered Douglas Pass at 8268 feet.

Fruita and Grand Junction, Colorado 


550 Jurassic Court
Fruita, CO 81521
(970) 858-7282
Summer hours (7 days a week) 9-5

In Fruita is the Museums of Western Colorado’s Dinosaur Journey (an awkward title, and yes, the “Museums” is plural). Dinosaur Journey is an odd place, a combination of good science and cheesy animatronic dinosaurs. It’s a good place for kids, because they can watch Utahraptor decapitating a poor sauropod, and can be spat upon with water from a Dilophosaurus (the “Jurassic Park” dino that spat venom, although there is no scientific evidence for spitting). There are also a simulated earthquake shaking floor, a water/rock damming table, and a big red box the size of a Brachiosaur heart. In the real science category, there are a cool T. rex model leg with muscles and ligaments, a front leg of Brachiosaurus that extends to the rafters, a model of Fruitadens, a teeny tiny little herbivorous dinosaur discovered nearby, and mounted skeletons of several armored dinosaurs (my favorites). When we were there, they had a special exhibit called “Horns and Frills,” featuring a number of ceratopsians, including Diabloceratops, Kosmoceratops, and Bravoceratops.
The Dino Bus

Tyrannosaurus leg, like a giant turkey leg

Apatosaurus femur with Allosaurus tooth marks

Animatronic Utahraptor slaughtering a sauropod

Brachiosaurus heart life-size

Front right limb of Brachiosaurus; his head would be up through the ceiling

Heliobatus radians

Spitting animatronic Dilophosaurus 

Velociraptor, about the size of a turkey

Pathologic fused vertebrae of Apatosaurus; he might have had a herniated disc

Diabloceratops

Wee little Fruitadens, about the size of a chicken

Moab, Utah


From Fruita, head west on I-70 back into Utah then south on highway 191 to Moab. We spent three nights in Moab, staying in a rented cabin. There are a ton of things to do around Moab, so you could stay longer.

Moab itself is a trendy town full of adventure outfitters, art galleries, and coffee shops. But if you know to look, there are a lot of dinosaurs around, too. 

112 West SR-313
Moab, UT 84532
(435) 355-0288
Summer hours (7 days a week) 10-6

As you come into town, you'll see Moab Giants, just north of town at the intersection of highways 191 and 313, which is also the turn-off to Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse Point State Park. You’ll see the Tyrannosaurus reges from the road—two giant, black dinosaurs stalking the desert. Moab Giants is another curious place, a combination of solid science and Hollywood. It was started by a couple of scientists (I wonder where they got the funding) but has a very “Jurassic Park” feel.
The "Jurassic Park"-esque entrance

T. reges visible from the highway
The whole place is based on the premise of tracks and what we can learn from them. The conditions which are ideal for preservation of dinosaur tracks are in general not conducive to fossilization of bones, and vice versa. For example, one display shows Eubrontes tracks (the tracks have Latin names, which strikes me, a biologist, as strange). Eubrontes tracks are early Jurassic tracks of a theropod, a three-toed carnivore. One representative critter who lived in that time and place and who could have made those tracks is Gojirasaurus quayi (Gojira = Godzilla!).

Gojirasaurus track, interpretive sign, and life-size reconstruction




The outdoor dinosaur garden features life-size dinosaur reconstructions, arranged from Triassic to end Cretaceous. Some dinosaurs are labeled, “Friendly Dinosaurs: Open Access. They love pictures and petting but do not ride or climb! They haven’t been properly prepared or trained for that”—perfect for photo ops. The reconstructions generally follow more recent science, with feathers and a lively stance, not like the dullard tail-draggers in other reconstructions. Utahraptor is particularly impressive: a seven-foot tall, feathered and clawed, menacing murderbird. At the end of garden are the two T. reges—standing underneath, you see how really big these animals were. In addition to the outdoor garden, there are a children’s play area, café, gift shop, small museum, 3D movie (pretty lame, actually, just a short history of the world from the Big Bang, but for inexplicable reasons it ends at the Permian so doesn’t even include dinosaurs). My kids’ favorite feature was the “5D Prehistoric Aquarium.” You put on 3D glasses and walk through a faux aquarium, which features seven “tanks” (i.e., screens) with animated aquatic beasts swimming about, including Dunkleosteus (giant Devonian fish with battle-axe bone plate teeth), Mosasaurus, and the big hit, Megalodon, the largest shark ever. 3D gives me a headache, but the aquarium really helps to demonstrate how large these animals were.
"Friendly Dinosaur: Open Access" 
Ceratosaurus

Diplodocus longus mom and babies

Gargoyleosaurus parkpinorum

Utahraptor: seven feet of swift, agile murderbird

Niobrarasaurus coleii

Tyrant Lizard King

Also in Moab is the Museum of Moab, featuring exhibits on paleontology, geology, archaeology and mining. Unfortunately, we didn’t get there this trip.
118 E. Center Street
Moab, UT 84532
(435) 259-7985
Summer hours (closed Sundays) 10-6

600 N Main Street, Moab UT
​(435) 259 – 7312
Summer hours (7 days a week) 8:30 AM – 10 PM

If you like dinosaurs, you probably like rocks and fossils in general, so a must-see place in Moab is Lin Ottinger’s Rock Shop, right on the main road at the north end of town. Lin Ottinger spent a lifetime collecting fossils in Utah, and made impressive discoveries. He has a dinosaur named after him in recognition of his contributions to paleontology, Iguanodon ottingeri. His rock shop is a glorious, chaotic, eclectic assortment of stuff. We bought Utah-native picture sandstone, fluorescent aragonite, and break-your-own geodes, plus non-native aquamarine, rose quartz, and a brachiopod. There are impressive Green River Formation fish fossils, a local sauropod femur (not for sale unless you have $4.5M in cash), opalized ammonites, giant amethyst geodes, dinosaur bone fragments, dinosaur gizzard stones (some species swallowed stones to break up the fibrous plant material that they swallowed whole), skulls, and trilobites.
Lin Ottinger's Rock Shop

Glorious assortment of stuff: skulls, Utahraptor claw, minerals, plastic dinosaurs, lanterns

Petrified wood

"Uranium Glass (Slightly Radioactive)"

Radioactive uranium/vanadium compound (Moab used to be a site of uranium mining)

I love any place with a shop dog!

Opalized ammonites

Green River Formation fish fossils
Agates at sunset

"Real, Genuine Petrified Femur from a Sauropod"

The $4.5M bone

The best part of Moab for a dinophile are the tracksites. There are a number of tracksites, some harder to find than others. The Discover Moab website, the Utah Geologic Survey website, and the Utah.com website have lists that overlap somewhat. We went to two tracksites, both on BLM land.

This site is approximately 23 miles north of Moab on Hwy 191. Turn right 0.6 miles past mile marker 148 as you go north from Moab. The road is labeled “North Klondike Trails” for dirt biking. Follow the dirt road for a while and go left at the fork in the road. (The right fork leads to a longer hiking trail to the "Stomping Ground" site, with different sizes and species of tracks.) Park at the tracksite parking lot and hike a short way up the hill to two adjacent tracksites. The tracks are late Jurassic, in Entrada Formation sandstone. First are about ten footprints of a sauropod (four-legged herbivore, probably Camarasaurus or Diplodocus) plodding along and turning right. Just beyond the sauropod tracks are the tracks of an injured theropod. This guy, probably an Allosaurus, was injured in the left leg, so that the tracks show a longer stride and heavier footfall with the right foot.
Three-toed theropod track

Theropod tracks extending away
Sauropod tracks extending away and then turning right

The Mill Canyon site is fantastic, one of the largest tracksites from the early Cretaceous in North America. Turn west on Mill Canyon Road, about 15 miles north of Moab, and follow the dirt road about a mile to the parking lot. From the parking lot it’s just a short walk to the site, which is surrounded by boardwalks to protect the tracks. BLM has helpful signs posted to explain the tracks. This patch of green Cedar Mountain Formation rock has tracks from multiple species of dinosaur, plus slide marks of a crocodile. There are tracks from large sauropods and theropods, armored dinos, and a probable Deinonychus—think of the “raptors” from “Jurassic Park.” They have three toes on each rear foot but the inner toe has a humongous death-dealing claw on it, so they walk on only the outer two toes and hold the claw up to avoid tripping and self-impalement.
Deinonychus tracks showing only two toes

Artist's reconstruction of all the assorted dinosaurs on that long-ago day

Medium theropod tracks, with my feet for size reference

BLM has done a nice job with boardwalks and signage

Mixed ornithopod and sauropod tracks

Visit in the morning when the shadows show the tracks

Arches National Park is right outside of Moab (5 miles north of town on Hwy 191), and is an extremely popular park. Delicate Arch is the iconic arch (it’s on our license plates). There is a trail to the arch, 1.5 miles one-way and including a fairly steep section up slickrock, but the view at the end is worth it. If you plan to take the trail, go as early in the morning as possible to minimize crowds and risk of heat stroke.
Delicate Arch

North Window Arch

Double Arch

West of Moab are Canyonlands National Park and Dead Horse Point State Park, both of which overlook the Green and Colorado Rivers. Canyonlands has three separate districts, which are not accessible from one to another. The district near Moab is called Island in the Sky, and has some impressive views from hiking trails and roadside stops.
Looks like a giant theropod track but it's the Colorado River

Hey Flat-Earthers, you can see the curvature of the Earth!

Price, Utah


From Moab, travel northwest on highways 191 & 6 to Price, the final corner of the diamond. 

155 East Main Street
Price, Utah 84501
(435) 613-5755


Summer hours (closed Sundays) 9-5

In the town of Price is the Prehistoric Museum of the Utah State University-Eastern (formerly College of Eastern Utah). This museum is struggling for funding, but a worthwhile place to visit. There are two wings of the museum, one paleontology and the other archaeology. The paleo half features a recumbent Camarasaurus skeleton (I’m not sure if mounting was too expensive), a Utahraptor in a bizarre dancing posture, presumably the better to slice out your guts with the hind foot claw, and several large armored dinosaurs. There is an extensive collection of Cretaceous dinosaur tracks from coal mines: the footprints formed when late Cretaceous beasts tromped across fallen plant material; that plant material became coal and now the tracks are in the ceiling of coal mines, and occasionally fall on miners’ heads. The archaeology half features the paleo-Indians of this area, with Pleistocene animals including the Huntington Mammoth (Mammuthus columbi), a nearly complete skeleton of a mammoth discovered during construction of the Huntington Reservoir Dam, a dire wolf, and a really big cave bear, Arctodus simus. The museum is updating their exhibits to reflect more recent research, so I was happy to let the kids buy souvenirs to help finance the museum.
Utahraptor funky dance move

Utahraptor funky dance move sculpture

Dimetrodon (not a dinosaur but a synapsid) had extra teeth at the back of the palate!

"Pet a dinosaur" Apatosaurus femur

Allosaurus vertebra punctured by a Stegosaurus tail spike

Reclining Camarasaurus

Cretaceous tracks from Utah coal mines

Huntington mammoth
Peloroplites cedrimontanus, an armored herbivore bigger than my Subaru

How science changes to incorporate new discoveries: this charming geologic time scale from 1965 doesn't have the Ediacaran period (pre-Cambrian), and the Cretaceous dinosaurs are of the fat, lazy, tail-dragging era.

And the final stop on the road trip:

Summer hours 10-5, Sundays 12-5
BLM office in Price, Utah at (435) 636-3600

South of Price is the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry, the largest assemblage of fossilized dinosaurs ever found. There are a number of late Jurassic species represented, including carnivores Allosaurus, Torvosaurus, and Ceratosaurus, and herbivores Camarasaurus, Barosaurus, and Stegosaurus. The quarry is called a “predator trap,” because the number of predators, especially Allosaurus, outnumbers the herbivores (think of a wolf stalking a herd of deer; normally the herbivores outnumber the carnivores). There have been so many Allosaurs of different ages studied that the growth cycle of the species is very well understood. The quarry is in the middle of nowhere; we came south from Wellington, which had poor signage (download the route from Google Maps), but it would probably be easier to come east from Elmo. You’ll take a number of dirt roads, seeing no one but sheep and goats, but finally you’ll see a gate with metal Allosaurus cutouts. The site has a small but nice visitor center, a picnic area surrounded by boulders as big as cars, a self-guided rock walk with fossils, and the quarry itself, which has some bones still in place in the ground, as well as casts. In the visitor center, a group of metal chickens gaze up in adoration at the mounted Allosaurus, awaiting their instructions for the Theropod Revolution. (For more on the Theropod Revolution, follow SUE the T. rex on Twitter!)
The Middle of Nowhere
Gates to the quarry

Allosaurus leading the Theropod Revolution

Modern theropods

Bones and casts in the quarry

Torvosaurus, Allosaurus, and Ceratosaurus