Big Cedar Ridge

We were supposed to be back to thrashing the grain after our buckaroo interlude... but a small rain shower cancelled those plans.  Wet grain can't be thrashed.  The guys headed up the mountain to put out salt, repair some fence, and check on the cows.  They took a lunch.

That means...

That  means... I don't have to cook lunch HERE and I'm free for the day!

YYYYYYYAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYY!

I was going to work on my bathroom construction project, but hey, if I'm free, I'm outta here!

Ever since I had decided to put fossils in my bathroom... I've wanted to go to Big Cedar Ridge.  Well known for its Cretaceous vegetation, I was ready to rediscover this place!  I supervised a Girl Scout/Boy Scout outing at this location years ago... the BLM guys just turned us loose with hammers and I remember the kids finding multiple samples.  I was hoping to be as lucky!

I don't need much, but I had in mind what I wanted... a single leaf fossilized... pristine... 



73 million years ago... this area was covered in vegetation... a fern wetland, a palmetto thicket, and a streamside thicket.  Volcanic ash quickly covered this area... like a plant Pompeii...  That's the ash tuff you see.  It has a popcorn texture on the top, you can stick a screwdriver into it with almost no resistance.



Oh, look!  A furry fossil!

No collecting of vertebrate fossils allowed!

Although I KNOW this is where the Girl Scouts were sent to dig, I had no success at finding anything.  Hmm.  I could tell someone else had been here recently, and so I followed their footprints.



Around the end of the eastern edge, I found this spot.  I don't know what those people were looking for, but I don't think they found it!  Quite a bit of "debris" had been tossed down the hill and I squirmed a seat on the rough pile of rocks and picked up a stone.  I tapped it with a hammer and voila!



A fossil leaf!

Those people had tossed a ton of fossils down the hill and I excitedly picked through their trash!  That just must be the archaeologist in me... I love antique trash heaps!



Amazing!  This was a compost pile!  Look at all the leaves!  My favorite, though, is the pine needles in the lower left side.



Pine needles quickly become my favorite... forget those palmetto leaves, I'm a pine needle kinda girl!  <You know, pine trees are edible...>



Lots of details in these needles.  I didn't take a lot home... my single pristine leaf didn't appear... 

I know they are out there... I'll just have to go again!




 

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Comments

  • 8/25/2010 8:01 AM ginny wrote:
    Dogs ya gotta love em. Ready to work and play, then ready to sleep the day away. Those fossils were wonderful. Good luck finding the one and only. I believe you can.
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  • 8/25/2010 8:02 AM Judy wrote:
    How fun to look for and find some great fossil leaves. Pretty hard to do. Looks like the doggies enjoyed the relaxation too. You do have a lot of wonderful places to have adventures.....
    Reply to this
  • 8/25/2010 7:47 PM Marilyn wrote:
    "...a furry fossil!" I love the way you express things in your stories. This was a very interesting entry. Hope you are successful in finding that special pine-needle fossil!
    Reply to this
  • 8/26/2010 1:40 PM Taryn wrote:
    Such a very interesting life you lead!
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  • 8/30/2010 8:36 AM Rhonda wrote:
    This was absolutely fascinating! Cool fossilized pine needles!
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