This is the birthday post of Govind Kudva! Happy birthday, Govind! If you like what you are reading, please feel free to follow us here or via Facebook! And remember, if
you have a birthday coming up, just email me the date at
cuyvaldar123946@gmail.com with the date and your favorite animal, and I
will do my best to get a post in!
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Sunday, February 24, 2013
17 Truths Episode 1: The Cheetah
If you haven't seen the "True Facts" video series, then you are missing out. Assuming, of course, that you have a good but slightly inappropriate and sarcastic sense of humor, and are not young enough that your parents will become angry with me if they find out where you found out about them. That is why I am not providing a link to them here. Anyways, I find them absolutely hysterical, and was quite eager to try my own hand at one! One of my favorite animals is the cheetah (which is pretty obvious for people who are regular readers of my blog), a sentiment which is shared by people all across the world. There are many interesting things about the cheetah, and many questions that people have about this fantastic and acrobatic feline. So I thought that, for the first True Facts-esque video, I could make it about the cheetah! It didn't hurt that I had a bunch of pictures of it, as well as a video! However, I did use a few photos from some friends of mine, so I am going to give photo credit to Grace Albers and Shira Wood-Isenberg! I would also like to give Joseph M. Roessler credit for the fantastic music that I used in the video! It was both composed and performed by him! HERE is a link to the song (called Dream Waltz), HERE is a link to some more of his music, and HERE is a link to his SoundCloud! Enjoy! And, of course, we have to have a link to the video!
And here we have some of the pictures featured in the video! Enjoy!
Monday, February 4, 2013
Red Foxes in Breckenridge!
For the past few years, every summer my family and I would go up to visit our good friends the Beckleys, who would stay for about a month in a rented house in Breckenridge, Colorado. One of the times, I forget exactly which one, a red fox was hovering around the house, eager for us to feed it. Apparently, the people in the neighborhood were feeding the fox, so it had become quite tame. We made a lot of noise to make it go away (in the hopes that it would become afraid of people, as wild animals should be), but not before we got some pretty great pictures. Check them out!
| A picture of the red fox outside of the house. Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| A picture of the red fox outside of the house. Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| A picture of the red fox outside of the house. Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| A picture of the red fox outside of the house. Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
| A picture of the red fox outside of the house. Photo Credit: Julie Neher |
Sunday, January 27, 2013
The Story of the Kremmling Ammonite Site and a Painting by Wayne Itano, Guest Blogger
Today, we have a very exciting post for you: a guest post from paleo-enthusiast Wayne Itano! Here is a bit of background on Mr. Itano:
Wayne Itano is a physicist at NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) in Boulder, CO. He has a hobby interest in paleontology and is also a curator adjoint at the Natural History Museum of the University of Colorado.
Today, Mr. Itano is going to tell us about the Kremmling Ammonite Site. Join me in giving him a warm welcome! Let's get started!
Dr. Kirk Johnson, formerly of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, is now head of the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.
Ray Troll is an artist with a special interest in natural history and ancient life. Here is his painting “Night of the Ammonites” inspired by a visit to the Kremmling Ammonite Locality.
The large disk-shelled creatures are ammonites called Placenticeras. The ones with narrow, straight, tapered
shells are another kind of ammonite, called Baculites.
The sharp-toothed swimming reptiles are called mosasaurs. We have evidence from bite marks on ammonite
shells that mosasaurs preyed on Placenticeras. Over on the left are some strangely shaped
small ammonites called Anaklinoceras.
Wayne Itano is a physicist at NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) in Boulder, CO. He has a hobby interest in paleontology and is also a curator adjoint at the Natural History Museum of the University of Colorado.
Today, Mr. Itano is going to tell us about the Kremmling Ammonite Site. Join me in giving him a warm welcome! Let's get started!
The Kremmling Cretaceous Ammonite Locality lies on BLM (Bureau of Land Management) land to the north of the little town of
Kremmling, in Grand County, Colorado. It
was first noticed for the very high concentration of very large ammonites(ammonites are extinct relatives of the modern chambered nautilus and were
probably more closely related to octopi and squids). It has been protected since the 1980s. It was written up in the book “Cruisin’ the Fossil Freeway” by the paleontologist Kirk Johnson and the artist Ray
Troll.
Dr. Kirk Johnson, formerly of the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, is now head of the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.
Ray Troll is an artist with a special interest in natural history and ancient life. Here is his painting “Night of the Ammonites” inspired by a visit to the Kremmling Ammonite Locality.
![]() |
| Artist Ray Troll’s picture of the Kremmling area, about 73 million years ago, during the Cretaceous Period, when most of Colorado was beneath the sea. Picture Credit: Ray Troll |
The Kremmling site was featured by Earth Magazine, in a kind
of online quiz called “Where on Earth.” The page with the question and answer is HERE.
If you want to visit the Kremmling site, first pay a visit
to the BLM office at 2103 E. Park Avenue,
Kremmling. They can advise you on road
conditions. At times it can be
inaccessible, even for 4-wheel drive vehicles. Here is a sign at the
site:
![]() |
| Warning sign at the Kremmling Ammonite protected area. Photo Credit: Wayne Itano |
Here is an informational sign. Collecting is prohibited within the site, but
there are nearby areas where collecting is allowed. Inquire at the BLM office.
The area is littered with boulders containing the
impressions of giant Placenticeras ammonites. The fossils themselves have been collected,
many to museums. Intact boulders
containing ammonites lie under the surface and could be studied in the future.
![]() |
| Boulders with impressions of Placentideras ammonites. Photo Credit: Wayne Itano |
Baculites (straight ammonites) are also rather common.
![]() |
| A Placenticeras ammonite impression with a Baculites fossil (cylindrical object) on the same boulder. Photo Credit: Wayne Itano |
Large clams called Inoceramus
are rather common. Here are some
examples.
Emmett Evanoff, a professor at the University of Northern
Colorado in Greeley, has been studying the paleontology of this area. One odd thing is that the great majority of
the Placenticeras fossils are of
females. (The males are distinguished by
being much smaller and having coarse ribs on their shells.) He thinks this
might have been a nesting site. The
males would have fertilized the eggs and then left, leaving the females to
guard the eggs. Katie DeBell was a student
of Emmett’s who mapped out the ammonites on the surface and seems to know them
all by number. She lives in Kremmling
and often gives tours, especially to school groups. Here she is, pointing out some features of
one of the ammonites.
I have a vacation house in the mountains not far from
Kremmling. I happen to know a painter
who is also a fossil enthusiast, named Terry McKee. I commissioned him to do a painting of the Kremmling site
when it was an ammonite nesting ground.
I also asked Dr. Evanoff for advice, and the three of us met to plan the
painting. Here it is, and the original
is now hanging in my mountain house.
- Wayne Itano
Thank you very much, Mr. Itano, for the post! The post was really interesting, and I know I learned a lot! I found the part about the nesting site particularly interesting! I have no doubt that my readers, as well as myself, would love to hear from you in the future! Thanks again! - Zack Neher
Thank you very much, Mr. Itano, for the post! The post was really interesting, and I know I learned a lot! I found the part about the nesting site particularly interesting! I have no doubt that my readers, as well as myself, would love to hear from you in the future! Thanks again! - Zack Neher
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Friday, December 21, 2012
Animal Spotlight: Gasparinisaura
Gasparinisaura is just one of those many dinosaurs that are not very famous at all, and not very well known. In fact, I hadn't even heard of it until this morning, when my episode of Dr. Who made the computer momentarily freeze, so I picked up my Jurassic Park Institue: Dinosaur Field Guide by Dr. Thomas R. Holtz and Dr. Michael Brett-Surman that was sitting next to me on the computer table and turned to page 74. Learn something new every day!
Gasparinisaura is considered to be a part of the basal, or primitive, ornithopods. Ornithopods are different from other ornithischian dinosaurs in that they have a premaxilla bone that reaches further than their maxilla bone, and that their jaw joint is further down than in other dinosaurs. Most of the basal ornithopods were around during the Jurassic Period, such as the Late Jurassic Othnielia rex, who inhabited what would become the rocks of the Morrison Formation of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. Most of the rest of the basal ornithopods didn't survive past the Early Cretaceous Period, but Gasparinisaura has been found in rocks dating from around 80-90 MYA, right smack-dab in the Middle Cretaceous Period of Argentina. According to the Jurassic Park Institute, "Remains of dinosaurs from this time span are so extremely rare, all the specimens in the world would fit in one small exhibit hall!"
Let's take a brief look at what we know about the evolution and the dispersal of the basal ornithopods, shall we? According to my massive, 861 page book called The Dinosauria, every member of the clade Ornithopoda (which includes the iguanodonts and the duck-billed hadrosaurs, as well as the basal ornithopods) had a common ancestor that came from Asia. This is interesting to note, because two other major clades of dinosaurs, the Marginocephalians (which includes the ceratopsians like Triceratops and the Pachycephalosaurs like Pachycephalosaurus and Stygimoloch) and the Thyreophorans (which includes stegosaurs like Stegosaurus and ankylosaurs like Ankylosaurus [yes, I know, that sounded incredibly redundant]) are hypothesized to have originally evolved in Asia, before spreading out to other parts of the world. Whew, that would have been a mouth-full if I had had to say that out loud.
Anyways, paleontologists believe that this common ancestor would have inhabited Asia during the Early Jurassic Period, or perhaps even before that. According to the book, prior to the Late Jurassic, a "major dispersal to North America took place." Following this dispersal to North America, two "subsequent dispersals from North America" followed, one to Europe, and the other to South America. (Keep in mind that, at this time in Earth's history, the continents were intermittently connected, allowing for the over-land dispersal of animals that would be entirely unable to do the same thing today.) The European dispersal contained ornithopods of the lineage that would one day lead to the relatively famous dinosaur known as Hypsilophodon. This dispersal is thought to have occurred before or during the Early Cretaceous. Meanwhile, the South American dispersal "took place (at the latest) during the early Late Cretaceous," and was composed of members of the lineage that would one day lead to our home-dawg, Gasparinisaura. Boy, am I the only one who just skimmed those last two paragraphs?
Gasparinisaura, like many of the basal-most members of the ornithopods, was just a little guy, only around two feet long, and probably weighing about as much as a chicken. Remains of Gasparinisaura are found in the Río Colorado Formation. With further digging (oh so witty) in The Dinosauria, I have been able to come up with other dinosaurs found in this formation. Here is a list of all of the dinosaurs mentioned in the book.
Alvarezsaurus, a member of the group of dinosaurs known as the alvarezsaurids, a group of Maniraptoran dinosaurs thought to be fairly closely related to the ornithomimosaurs.
Patagopteryx, a flightless bird that probably weighed around as much as a turkey.
Neuquenornis, a small, pigeon-sized bird. Apparently, paleontologists have not only discovered a partial skeleton of this animal, but also some eggs with embryos! Pretty neat!
Velocisaurus, a four or so foot long ceratosaur, not very well known. A noasaurid, and, as you can see in the pictures below (all four of the pictures are of Velocisaurus), looks a lot like its close relative, Masiakasaurus, whose picture you can see if you click on the word "Masiakasaurus" where it is yellow.
Aucasaurus, a thirteen or fourteen foot long abelisaur, thought to be a close relative of Carnotaurus. Known from a skeleton that is quite complete, but not yet fully described.
Neuquenosaurus and Titanosaurus, a pair of sauropod dinosaurs.
Gasparinisaura is considered to be a part of the basal, or primitive, ornithopods. Ornithopods are different from other ornithischian dinosaurs in that they have a premaxilla bone that reaches further than their maxilla bone, and that their jaw joint is further down than in other dinosaurs. Most of the basal ornithopods were around during the Jurassic Period, such as the Late Jurassic Othnielia rex, who inhabited what would become the rocks of the Morrison Formation of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. Most of the rest of the basal ornithopods didn't survive past the Early Cretaceous Period, but Gasparinisaura has been found in rocks dating from around 80-90 MYA, right smack-dab in the Middle Cretaceous Period of Argentina. According to the Jurassic Park Institute, "Remains of dinosaurs from this time span are so extremely rare, all the specimens in the world would fit in one small exhibit hall!"
Let's take a brief look at what we know about the evolution and the dispersal of the basal ornithopods, shall we? According to my massive, 861 page book called The Dinosauria, every member of the clade Ornithopoda (which includes the iguanodonts and the duck-billed hadrosaurs, as well as the basal ornithopods) had a common ancestor that came from Asia. This is interesting to note, because two other major clades of dinosaurs, the Marginocephalians (which includes the ceratopsians like Triceratops and the Pachycephalosaurs like Pachycephalosaurus and Stygimoloch) and the Thyreophorans (which includes stegosaurs like Stegosaurus and ankylosaurs like Ankylosaurus [yes, I know, that sounded incredibly redundant]) are hypothesized to have originally evolved in Asia, before spreading out to other parts of the world. Whew, that would have been a mouth-full if I had had to say that out loud.
Anyways, paleontologists believe that this common ancestor would have inhabited Asia during the Early Jurassic Period, or perhaps even before that. According to the book, prior to the Late Jurassic, a "major dispersal to North America took place." Following this dispersal to North America, two "subsequent dispersals from North America" followed, one to Europe, and the other to South America. (Keep in mind that, at this time in Earth's history, the continents were intermittently connected, allowing for the over-land dispersal of animals that would be entirely unable to do the same thing today.) The European dispersal contained ornithopods of the lineage that would one day lead to the relatively famous dinosaur known as Hypsilophodon. This dispersal is thought to have occurred before or during the Early Cretaceous. Meanwhile, the South American dispersal "took place (at the latest) during the early Late Cretaceous," and was composed of members of the lineage that would one day lead to our home-dawg, Gasparinisaura. Boy, am I the only one who just skimmed those last two paragraphs?
Gasparinisaura, like many of the basal-most members of the ornithopods, was just a little guy, only around two feet long, and probably weighing about as much as a chicken. Remains of Gasparinisaura are found in the Río Colorado Formation. With further digging (oh so witty) in The Dinosauria, I have been able to come up with other dinosaurs found in this formation. Here is a list of all of the dinosaurs mentioned in the book.
Patagopteryx, a flightless bird that probably weighed around as much as a turkey.
Neuquenornis, a small, pigeon-sized bird. Apparently, paleontologists have not only discovered a partial skeleton of this animal, but also some eggs with embryos! Pretty neat!
Velocisaurus, a four or so foot long ceratosaur, not very well known. A noasaurid, and, as you can see in the pictures below (all four of the pictures are of Velocisaurus), looks a lot like its close relative, Masiakasaurus, whose picture you can see if you click on the word "Masiakasaurus" where it is yellow.
Aucasaurus, a thirteen or fourteen foot long abelisaur, thought to be a close relative of Carnotaurus. Known from a skeleton that is quite complete, but not yet fully described.
Neuquenosaurus and Titanosaurus, a pair of sauropod dinosaurs.
Labels:
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Asia,
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Dinosaur,
Europe,
Gasparinisaura,
Hypsilophodon,
Jurassic,
Morrison Formation,
North America,
South America,
Utah,
Wyoming
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
23-Fact Tuesday: All About Allosaurus!
Today we are going to do yet another 23-Fact Tuesday, and this time it is all about a particularly interesting dinosaur known as Allosaurus. But this 23-Fact Tuesday is particularly special, as it is also the birthday post of one of my personal heroes and one of the people who inspired me to take this dinosaur- and animal-oriented path, Mr. "Dino" George Blasing! Happy birthday, Mr. Blasing! Here we go!
1. On Halloween in 1879, Arthur Lakes discovered a tooth from a dinosaur that was later identified as Allosaurus in Wyoming.
2. In the United States, Allosaurus is found in the Morrison Formation, and lived alongside other animals such as Stegosaurus, Apatosaurus, Ceratosaurus, Camptosaurus, Gargoyleosaurus, and many others.
3. The claws on the hand of Allosaurus could reportedly grow up to 10 inches long.
4. Some scientists believe that Allosaurus had a very weak bite, around the strength of a leopard. Regardless of exactly how weak of a bite it had, Allosaurus was definitely not a heavy-biter champion, and many paleontologists hypothesize that it instead used its skull sort of like a hatchet to kill its prey, using its razor-sharp teeth to critically injure its prey.
5. The first fossils of Allosaurus that were ever discovered were originally thought to be petrified horse hooves.
6. Allosaurus is the state dinosaur of Utah.
7. Allosaurus certainly didn't sit on its rump and enjoy hamburgers and tea, as their skeletons show that they suffered many injuries throughout their lives. As a matter of fact, the Allosaurus specimen that is on display at the Smithsonian Institution has a number of broken ribs, a smashed shoulder blade, and a damaged lower jaw.
8. The lower jaw of the specimen at the Smithsonian was so damaged, in fact, that it took scientists more than 100 years to figure out that it was, in fact, an Allosaurus jaw!
9. A predator-prey relationship between Allosaurus and Stegosaurus was all but confirmed with the discovery of a specimen of Allosaurus with a hole in one of its tail vertebrae that perfectly matched the shape and size of the thagomizer on the tail of Stegosaurus.
10. "Allosaurus" spelled backwards is "Suruasolla," which means absolutely nothing.
11. The small horns above the eyes of Allosaurus are mostly thought to have been for display, as most scientists believe them to be too weak to withstand much stress resulting from conflict with prey or other Allosaurus.
12. Allosaurus gives its name to the group Allosauroidea, which includes the Chinese theropods Yangchuanosaurus and Sinraptor, and the carcharodontosaurids, which includes one of the largest carnivorous dinosaurs of all time, Carcharodontosaurus, amongst other dinosaurs.
13. Some of the other scientific names that Allosaurus fragilis has had over the years are Allosaurus lucaris, Allosaurus ferox, Labrosaurus ferox, Labrosaurus lucaris, Antrodemus, Poicilopleuron valens, Laelaps trihedrodon, Epanterias amplexus, Hypsirhophus discurus, Hypsirhophus partim, and Creosaurus atrox, with a few other names under debate right now. Specifically, some scientists think that the dinosaur known as Saurophaganax is the same animal as Allosaurus. However, I have talked with a few people, including Matthew Mossbrucker, curator of the Morrison Natural History Museum, and he says that he has seen the remains of Saurophaganax and believes them to be distinct from Allosaurus.
14. Besides Saurophaganax, Allosaurus was much larger than the other known theropods from Late Jurassic Morrison, such as Ceratosaurus and Torvosaurus.
15. We humans actually live closer in time to the famous Tyrannosaurus rex, Triceratops, and other dinosaurs from that time period than they do to Allosaurus!
16. Allosaurus fragilis was first named by famous paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh in 1877.
17. The scientific name of Allosaurus fragilis translates to "fragile different lizard," named such due to the fact that Marsh believed that the vertebrae of Allosaurus would have been quite weak, and were different from those of other, previously discovered dinosaurs. Now we know that vertebrae of this kind were quite common.
18. One of the most famous specimens of Allosaurus is the approximately 95% complete specimen nicknamed "Big Al." Estimated to be only a teenager at his TOD, he is about 26 feet long, which probably helps to explain why so many of my dinosaur books list the estimated length of Allosaurus at around 26 feet.
19. Allosaurus lived during the Late Jurassic Period, around 155.7-150.8 MYA in the United States (Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, Oklahoma, and South Dakota), Portugal, and possibly the Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania, although many people believe that this is African animal is an entirely different animal from Allosaurus.
20. Work began at the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry in 1960, and over 40 individual specimens of Allosaurus have been uncovered there since then.
21. Due to the vast number of Allosaurus specimens discovered in all different stages of its growth development (especially from Cleveland-Lloyd), paleontologists have been able to estimate that Allosaurus reached full-size at around 15 years of age, and lived to around 22-28 years old.
23. Allosaurus is the favorite dinosaur of the famous dinosaur educator, "Dino" George Blasing.
And remember, if you have a birthday coming up, just email me the date at cuyvaldar123946@gmail.com with the date and your favorite animal, and I will do my best to get a post in! And remember, if you like what you're reading, make sure you LIKE US ON FACEBOOK, follow us (if you have a google or gmail account), or hit the subscribe button off to the right if you don't!
| Allosaurus Vs. Stegosaurus at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science |
2. In the United States, Allosaurus is found in the Morrison Formation, and lived alongside other animals such as Stegosaurus, Apatosaurus, Ceratosaurus, Camptosaurus, Gargoyleosaurus, and many others.
| A skeleton of Gargoyleosaurus from the Denver Museum of Nature and Science |
| Allosaurus Vs. Camptosaurus that I saw at a traveling exhibit at the San Antonio River Walk in Texas |
| Ceratosaurus at the Smithsonian |
| Stegosaurus at the Utah Field House |
| The arm and the claws of Allosaurus, mounted at the Morrison Natural History Museum |
5. The first fossils of Allosaurus that were ever discovered were originally thought to be petrified horse hooves.
6. Allosaurus is the state dinosaur of Utah.
| A reconstructed skeleton of Allosaurus at the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry in Utah |
| A crushed femur belonging to Allosaurus from the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry |
9. A predator-prey relationship between Allosaurus and Stegosaurus was all but confirmed with the discovery of a specimen of Allosaurus with a hole in one of its tail vertebrae that perfectly matched the shape and size of the thagomizer on the tail of Stegosaurus.
| Allosaurus Vs. Stegosaurus at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science |
| The "thagomizer" of Stegosaurus, mounted at the DMNS. Check out THIS post to learn about how this particular part of the Stegosaurus got its name! |
11. The small horns above the eyes of Allosaurus are mostly thought to have been for display, as most scientists believe them to be too weak to withstand much stress resulting from conflict with prey or other Allosaurus.
12. Allosaurus gives its name to the group Allosauroidea, which includes the Chinese theropods Yangchuanosaurus and Sinraptor, and the carcharodontosaurids, which includes one of the largest carnivorous dinosaurs of all time, Carcharodontosaurus, amongst other dinosaurs.
13. Some of the other scientific names that Allosaurus fragilis has had over the years are Allosaurus lucaris, Allosaurus ferox, Labrosaurus ferox, Labrosaurus lucaris, Antrodemus, Poicilopleuron valens, Laelaps trihedrodon, Epanterias amplexus, Hypsirhophus discurus, Hypsirhophus partim, and Creosaurus atrox, with a few other names under debate right now. Specifically, some scientists think that the dinosaur known as Saurophaganax is the same animal as Allosaurus. However, I have talked with a few people, including Matthew Mossbrucker, curator of the Morrison Natural History Museum, and he says that he has seen the remains of Saurophaganax and believes them to be distinct from Allosaurus.
| A reconstructed skeleton of Saurophaganax that I saw at a traveling exhibit at the San Antonio River Walk in Texas |
| A reconstructed skull of Saurophaganax that I saw at a traveling exhibit at the San Antonio River Walk in Texas |
| A Triceratops skull at the Morrison Natural History Museum |
17. The scientific name of Allosaurus fragilis translates to "fragile different lizard," named such due to the fact that Marsh believed that the vertebrae of Allosaurus would have been quite weak, and were different from those of other, previously discovered dinosaurs. Now we know that vertebrae of this kind were quite common.
18. One of the most famous specimens of Allosaurus is the approximately 95% complete specimen nicknamed "Big Al." Estimated to be only a teenager at his TOD, he is about 26 feet long, which probably helps to explain why so many of my dinosaur books list the estimated length of Allosaurus at around 26 feet.
19. Allosaurus lived during the Late Jurassic Period, around 155.7-150.8 MYA in the United States (Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Montana, Oklahoma, and South Dakota), Portugal, and possibly the Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania, although many people believe that this is African animal is an entirely different animal from Allosaurus.
20. Work began at the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry in 1960, and over 40 individual specimens of Allosaurus have been uncovered there since then.
| Unarticulated bones of Allosaurus from the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry |
23. Allosaurus is the favorite dinosaur of the famous dinosaur educator, "Dino" George Blasing.
And remember, if you have a birthday coming up, just email me the date at cuyvaldar123946@gmail.com with the date and your favorite animal, and I will do my best to get a post in! And remember, if you like what you're reading, make sure you LIKE US ON FACEBOOK, follow us (if you have a google or gmail account), or hit the subscribe button off to the right if you don't!
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Wednesday, December 12, 2012
More Squirrel Prints, Plus Some Bird Ones, Too!
As I MENTIONED YESTERDAY, we got our first real snow yesterday, and there were some squirrel footprints in our driveway. After I made the post, when I got home, my father pointed out some bird footprints on the back porch, and this morning I saw some more, better squirrel prints on our back stoop. I decided to share these cool prints with you as well, since squirrels and birds are quite rare in North America! (Sarcasm). The first two picture are of the bird tracks, and then all of the rest are from the eastern fox squirrel.
![]() |
| Bird tracks |
| I forgot the flash for this one, but I thought that the bird footprints still looked pretty cool with the green light coming from our back-porch light! |
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Squirrel Footprints on Our Doorstep!
This morning we woke up to a fresh blanket of snow, the first (real) snow of the year for us! Naturally this means that I must do all of my first snow traditions, including watching the Battle of Hoth scene from Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, and wearing my Mammoth and Mastodon Madness t-shirt from the Denver Museum of Nature and Science. Anyways, on my way over to school, I saw a few footprints. I took a few pictures on my phone so they aren't very good looking, but I believe them to be from the eastern fox squirrel, the type of squirrel that is just so common around here in Boulder, Colorado! If anyone knows otherwise please let me know, but I am 99.99% sure that this is what we are looking at! The first two pictures are the ones that I took with my phone. The first picture has an impression of my right index finger in the snow next to the footprints for scale. The third picture is a picture that someone else took of some eastern fox squirrel footprints in the snow too!
Thursday, November 22, 2012
The Animals of Estes and Rocky Mountain National Park
As I mentioned earlier today, my family and I stayed at Estes Park a few nights ago. During the day, we hit up the nearby Rocky Mountain National Park. We saw a few different animals, a few of which I unfortunately was unable to get pictures of! Here I will tell you all about the animals that we saw there!
First off, we went over to Lake Estes. Despite the cold and the wind, probably a hundred or so geese, ducks, crows, and ravens were all scavenging around in the shallow water and the muddy areas. We also saw a bald eagle, but unfortunately it was too far away for us to get any pictures. Right before that, though, we spotted a muskrat (a little, water-loving rodent) swimming through the water! It was really super cool, as it was an incredibly powerful swimmer! We were walking along next to it, taking a ton of pictures and videos, but the muskrat was easily keeping pace with us! It was swimming against the current, as well as against the wind, but somehow this rat-sized creature was able to forge ahead!
When I ran out in front of the muskrat to get pictures of it up close, it ducked into its burrow. We were able to pinpoint the entrance because right out in front was a whole pile of what looked like chewed off crayfish pincers!
Here is a video of the muskrat swimming:
Muskrat Swimming Against The Current
We also saw a lot of elk, as we have talked about before. Here are some more pictures that my mother took in the morning, around the same time that my Primos Truth Cam was picking them up, too!
When we first saw the elk right next to our cabin, a male mule deer walked right next to my mother and I, no more than ten feet from us while we were next to the river! It was really cool, but a little sad to see how comfortable these animals are around humans. Made for a good photo op, though!
While we were on our walk around Lake Estes, we passed by a male elk with a harem of four females on the golf course. Here are some of those pictures!
And finally, a herd of elk in Rocky Mountain National Park!
Finally, although no one but my father saw it and we got no pictures of it, while we were driving in Rocky Mountain National Park at around 4:00 or so in the afternoon/evening, we almost ran over an ermine (also known as a stoat or a short-tailed weasel)! Apparently it was adorned in its winter fur which, much like the arctic fox, changes with the seasons to blend in with its environment! The ermine, along with otters, badgers, other weasels, and the wolverine, is a member of the family Mustelidae, colloquially referred to as the "mustelids." The mustelids, in turn, are members of the superfamily Musteloidea, which we have discussed in the past. It is within this superfamily that you will find coatis, raccoons, skunks, and red pandas.
First off, we went over to Lake Estes. Despite the cold and the wind, probably a hundred or so geese, ducks, crows, and ravens were all scavenging around in the shallow water and the muddy areas. We also saw a bald eagle, but unfortunately it was too far away for us to get any pictures. Right before that, though, we spotted a muskrat (a little, water-loving rodent) swimming through the water! It was really super cool, as it was an incredibly powerful swimmer! We were walking along next to it, taking a ton of pictures and videos, but the muskrat was easily keeping pace with us! It was swimming against the current, as well as against the wind, but somehow this rat-sized creature was able to forge ahead!
| The muskrat swimming! |
| This is how far the muskrat swam! It was certainly more than 100 yards, all keeping up with us! CRAZINESS! |
| The pile of chewed crayfish parts outside of the muskrat burrow |
| Some chewed parts on top of a rock |
Here is a video of the muskrat swimming:
Muskrat Swimming Against The Current
We also saw a lot of elk, as we have talked about before. Here are some more pictures that my mother took in the morning, around the same time that my Primos Truth Cam was picking them up, too!
| The elk drinking on our first morning there! |
| An elk drinking on the first morning |
| The mule deer |
| That's our cabin, right there! |
| A male elk on the first night there, around the time that we saw the mule deer from above. It was eating from a bird feeder! |
| The harem of female elk off to the left, while the male is grazing on the right |
| The male elk |
| The female elk |
| Another shot with the female elk off to the left and the male elk off to the right |
Finally, although no one but my father saw it and we got no pictures of it, while we were driving in Rocky Mountain National Park at around 4:00 or so in the afternoon/evening, we almost ran over an ermine (also known as a stoat or a short-tailed weasel)! Apparently it was adorned in its winter fur which, much like the arctic fox, changes with the seasons to blend in with its environment! The ermine, along with otters, badgers, other weasels, and the wolverine, is a member of the family Mustelidae, colloquially referred to as the "mustelids." The mustelids, in turn, are members of the superfamily Musteloidea, which we have discussed in the past. It is within this superfamily that you will find coatis, raccoons, skunks, and red pandas.
Labels:
Bald Eagle,
Bird of Prey,
Colorado,
Crow,
Deer,
Duck,
Eagle,
Elk,
Ermine,
Estes Park,
Muskrat,
Mustelid,
North America,
Primos Truth Cam,
Raven,
RMNP,
Rodent,
United States,
Weasel
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