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!
Showing posts with label Track/Footprint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Track/Footprint. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Friday, November 30, 2012
Cal Orck'o: Not A Place for the Acrophobic
In 1994, Klaus Schütt discovered an enormous slab of dinosaur tracks. You're probably thinking enormous like Jabba the Hutt enormous or my cat enormous. (She's a big kitty). But no, I mean ENORMOUS enormous. And by ENORMOUS enormous, I mean a mile wide and 500 feet tall. Yeah, that big. Another thing about Cal Orck'o: its on a 70 degree incline.
Real fast, let me include a brief disclaimer: I have looked at probably 25 different books and websites that mention this place, and half of them spell it "Cal Orco," and the other half spell it "Cal Orko," while a few even spell it "Cal Orcko." The UNESCO website calls it "Cal Orck'o," so that's the one that I went with on the blog. So yeah, I really don't know which way is which, but nevertheless, this place is quite an interesting fossil site!
It wasn't until 1998 that Christian Meyer, a Swiss paleontologist, lead a team of scientists to investigate the site, which is near a concrete factory in Sucre, Bolivia. They found that the enormous trackway is from the Late Cretaceous Period, dated at around 68 million years ago (MYA). They learned that, at the time that the rocks and footprints were formed, the area was a lakeside where animals from all over would come to drink. They also determined that Cal Orck'o was the "largest site of dinosaur tracks found so far," possessing the largest number of dinosaur footprints of anywhere in the world.
Cal Orck'o has over 5,000 dinosaur tracks made by at least six identified dinosaurs in around 250 trackways, some of which extend for hundreds of feet in a single direction.
Due to the extremely steep face of the fossil site, erosion is a
constant threat to the dinosaur footprints. The Bolivian government
combats this by spending a whopping $30 million every year. Despite
this, a large chunk broke off in February of 2010, destroying around 300
footprints.
Information on Cal Orck'o is extremely spotty, and the website for the site doesn't seem to have an "English" option. My Spanish skills are pretty rudimentary at best, but I think I was able to come up with a list of the dinosaurs whose tracks are preserved at Cal Orck'o. Now, keep in mind, very rarely do you definitively know what animal made a fossilized footprint, and most of the time these are simply good guesses. For the picture below, I used ones taken from the garden area thing at the Cal Orck'o museum. So if you are going to blame someone for inaccurate data, make sure you blame them and not me!
Real fast, let me include a brief disclaimer: I have looked at probably 25 different books and websites that mention this place, and half of them spell it "Cal Orco," and the other half spell it "Cal Orko," while a few even spell it "Cal Orcko." The UNESCO website calls it "Cal Orck'o," so that's the one that I went with on the blog. So yeah, I really don't know which way is which, but nevertheless, this place is quite an interesting fossil site!
An abelisaur, a type of carnivorous dinosaur like Abelisaurus or Carnotaurus.
An iguanodont, a type of herbivorous dinosaur like Iguanodon.
A ceratopsian, a type of dinosaur like Triceratops or Protoceratops.
An ankylosaur, a type of dinosaur like Ankylosaurus.
A titanosaur, a type of sauropod dinosaur like Saltasaurus.
A dromaeosaur, a type of carnivorous dinosaur like Velociraptor.
A ceratosaur, a type of carnivorous dinosaur like Ceratosaurus.
A hadrosaur, a type of herbivorous dinosaur like Parasaurolophus.
A tyrannosaur, a type of carnivorous dinosaur like Tyrannosaurus.
Again, keep in mind that I have next to no idea which of these, if any, were found at Cal Orck'o. I plan on doing a little bit of digging within the next few weeks, so hopefully I will be able to get back to you sometime soon!
Labels:
Ankylosaur,
Bolivia,
Cal Orck'o,
Ceratopsian,
Cretaceous,
Dinosaur,
Dromaeosaur,
Fossil Trackway,
Hadrosaur,
Iguanodon,
Late Cretaceous,
Paleontologist,
Record Breaker,
Sauropod,
South America,
Track/Footprint
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Animal Spotlight: The Bobcat
First of all, remember, if you like what you are reading, hit the "follow" or the "subscribe" button below!"
The bobcat is one of three main felines that lives in North America, the others being the Canadian lynx and the mountain lion. (Although other cats, like the jaguar, jaguarundi and ocelot, do occasionally make it up to Texas and Mexico, generally they just live in Central and South America). Labeled "Least Concern" by the IUCN, the bobcat averages around three feet in length, and is named such for the short, "bobbed" tail.
The bobcat is quite adaptable; it inhabits almost every single environment that the Continental United States has to offer, as well as most of Mexico. There are thirteen recognized sub-species of bobcat. Furthermore, despite its size, can be strong enough to take down small deer. Here is a link to a video about a bobcat that I found to be quite interesting.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5BfNtim148
When we went camping last week, twice did we see paw prints that looked too small to be mountain lion prints, and were most likely bobcat prints. I was quite excited; unfortunately (but not surprisingly) we didn't see any of the cats themselves. Here is one picture from each of the times we saw the tracks.
The bobcat is one of three main felines that lives in North America, the others being the Canadian lynx and the mountain lion. (Although other cats, like the jaguar, jaguarundi and ocelot, do occasionally make it up to Texas and Mexico, generally they just live in Central and South America). Labeled "Least Concern" by the IUCN, the bobcat averages around three feet in length, and is named such for the short, "bobbed" tail.
| A bobcat at The Living Desert in Palm Desert, California. Note the short, stubby tail. |
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5BfNtim148
When we went camping last week, twice did we see paw prints that looked too small to be mountain lion prints, and were most likely bobcat prints. I was quite excited; unfortunately (but not surprisingly) we didn't see any of the cats themselves. Here is one picture from each of the times we saw the tracks.
Labels:
Animal Spotlight,
Bobcat,
Canada,
Canadian Lynx,
Colorado,
Deer,
Feline,
IUCN,
Jaguar,
Jaguarundi,
Least Concern,
Lynx,
Mammal,
Mexico,
Mountain Lion,
North America,
Ocelot,
Texas,
Track/Footprint,
United States
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
The Fauna of South Carolina: Reptiles and Amphibians
First off, don't forget to look below to see the answer to last weeks mystery animal, and to see a couple of pictures of this weeks!
Recently, my family visited some good friends of ours in South Carolina for a few weeks. Not only did we have a lot of fun visiting them, we saw a lot of cool plants and animals there that we simply don't have up north! For some of you, many of these animals and plants will be routine and boring, but hopefully there will be something in here that you will find interesting! I think I am going to split this post up into at least a few different segments, with tomorrows post devoted entirely to the Black Skimmer, a very interesting bird that I had the good fortune to see hunt! So today I am going to talk about some of the interesting reptiles and amphibians we saw down there, and over the next few weeks we can take a look at some of the birds, fossils and other things we saw down there!
Due to the increased heat and humidity, coupled with less of a swing between the seasons (i.e. it rarely snows and drops below freezing), the south is an excellent place to see all sorts of reptiles and amphibians. We saw a number of turtles and a frog/toad or two when we were in the south, but what interested me more were the lizards.
Recently, my family visited some good friends of ours in South Carolina for a few weeks. Not only did we have a lot of fun visiting them, we saw a lot of cool plants and animals there that we simply don't have up north! For some of you, many of these animals and plants will be routine and boring, but hopefully there will be something in here that you will find interesting! I think I am going to split this post up into at least a few different segments, with tomorrows post devoted entirely to the Black Skimmer, a very interesting bird that I had the good fortune to see hunt! So today I am going to talk about some of the interesting reptiles and amphibians we saw down there, and over the next few weeks we can take a look at some of the birds, fossils and other things we saw down there!
Due to the increased heat and humidity, coupled with less of a swing between the seasons (i.e. it rarely snows and drops below freezing), the south is an excellent place to see all sorts of reptiles and amphibians. We saw a number of turtles and a frog/toad or two when we were in the south, but what interested me more were the lizards.
| A Carolina anole (Anolis carolinensis). Despite its name, the Carolina anole is found in both South and North Carolina, as well as Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Alabama and Mississippi. |
| A type of skink, but I have yet to ascertain its species, although I am almost certain its genus is that of Plestiodon |
And then, of course, there's the gators. The American Alligator lives in the same states as the Carolina anole, as well as Virginia, Arkansas and Oklahoma. While we did see a few in the wild, all of these shots (except for that of the gator footprint) were taken at a place called Brookgreen Gardens, or at a restaurant called the Crab Shack.
| This big gator we saw at Brookgreen Gardens |
| This is a picture of a gator footprint that I took. You can see three of the toes very well, making it look a lot like a theropod dinosaur track, but you can see the other two toes as little holes in the ground. |
| This picture, and all the rest, were taken at an awesome (both food- and entertainment-wise) restaurant on Tybee Island in Georgia called The Crab Shack. |
This post is part of "The Fauna of South Carolina" series. For the rest of the posts in this series, click HERE.
Labels:
Alligator,
Amphibian,
Bird,
Black Skimmer,
Brookgreen Gardens,
Crocodilian,
Fauna of South Carolina,
Florida,
Frog,
Georgia,
Green Anole,
Lizard,
North America,
Reptile,
South Carolina,
Texas,
Track/Footprint,
Turtle
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