Bone hunt: a reporter's week in the wilds of Montana."I think I've found something!" The call rang out from across the quarry. Suddenly, a dozen or so would-be paleontologists--myself included--shifted their mental focus from the small zones of rock immediately in front of them to a new center of attention. Having spent the last few hours using hand tools to grub our way through crumbly crum·bly adj. crum·bli·er, crum·bli·est Easily crumbled; friable. crum bli·ness n.Adj. 1. rock with little tangible result, we found the idea that someone had actually found something to be exciting indeed. Nate Murphy, the paleontologist in charge of the dig, strolled over to take a look. "That's something, all right," he said. A little more excavation revealed the 3-centimeter-long tip of a theropod theropod Any species of bipedal, carnivorous saurischian in the suborder Theropoda. The chicken-sized Compsognathus,the smallest known adult dinosaur, probably weighed 2–4 lb (1–2 kg); the tyrannosaurs weighed tons. dinosaur's tooth. Considering the age of the rocks that entombed Entombed, or entomb, may refer to:
This episode, the first thrill on my recent foray into Verb 1. foray into - enter someone else's territory and take spoils; "The pirates raided the coastal villages regularly" raid encroach upon, intrude on, obtrude upon, invade - to intrude upon, infringe, encroach on, violate; "This new colleague invades my paleontology paleontology (pā'lēəntŏl`əjē) [Gr.,= study of early beings], science of the life of past geologic periods based on fossil remains. fieldwork, was by no means the last. Sure, most of those thrills were vicarious vicarious /vi·car·i·ous/ (vi-kar´e-us) 1. acting in the place of another or of something else. 2. occurring at an abnormal site. vi·car·i·ous adj. 1. . Other folks found many more fossils--and more impressive ones--than I did. Nevertheless, I gained an understanding invaluable to my writing about paleontology--how dinosaur bones start their journey from rock formations into museums. My invitation from Murphy, research director of the Judith River Judith River A river, about 200 km (124 mi) long, flowing from central Montana northward to the Missouri River. Dinosaur Institute in Malta, Mont., came late last year. "Have you ever been on a dinosaur dig?" he suddenly asked during a chat at October's annual meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology was founded in 1940 for individuals with an interest in vertebrate paleontology. SVP (as it is known to its members) now has almost 2,000 members. . "You need to understand what goes on in the field." As I'd already suspected, extracting fossils from their stony tombs is hard, gritty work. The first step often is literally stumbling across bones that have eroded from a hillside. Then, there's some detective work tracking those fragments uphill to their source. There's the backbreaking back·break·ing adj. Demanding great exertion; arduous and exhausting. back break work of moving tons of rock to expose layers that hold the ancient bones, followed by the painstaking excavation of sometimes fragile remains that haven't seen the light of day for millions of years. Most of the time, it's achingly monotonous. But oh, those moments of excitement! SUNDAY, JULY 2: Members of the dig team gather at noon at a hotel in Billings, Mont. Many stayed elsewhere the night before--some at hotels, others at campsites, a few at their nearby homes. Our 11-vehicle caravan reaches the dig site, about 160 kilometers north of Billings, in a little more than 2 hours. The highways and gravel roads that we follow pass through a variety of landscapes, including ranchland dotted with small oil wells and sparse forests. We pull into our campsite and pile out of the cars into rolling pastureland. All eyes are immediately drawn to a grim, gray scar on the other side of a small valley, a quarry where Murphy and other paleontologists have, on and off during the past couple of years, spent time unearthing the remains of two large dinosaurs. We are tempted to rush over there, but there is a campsite to set up. Dave Hein, owner of the ranch, has mowed an area where we can pitch the cook tent and park the supply trailers. Portable toilets are towed to the far side of the campsite, and the camp showers are assembled next to the water truck--compared with digs in more-remote locations, this expedition will be posh, I am told. I will be privileged enough to sleep in the back of a truck. While the other campers set up their tents, I chat with Hein to find out more about the site. Some of his wife's ancestors--five brothers from England, from whom Hein's 5E Ranch gets its name--settled here about a century ago. In 1985, Hein first found chips of fossilized fos·sil·ize v. fos·sil·ized, fos·sil·iz·ing, fos·sil·iz·es v.tr. 1. To convert into a fossil. 2. To make outmoded or inflexible with time; antiquate. v.intr. bone lying on a hillside. Then in 2003, he and his son used some earthmoving equipment at the site and came across a few large bones. Realizing the possible importance of the find, they turned to local experts. After a series of phone calls, Hein spoke to Murphy, who has since excavated bones at the site each summer. Around the campfire after dinner, at Murphy's behest, we take turns introducing ourselves. Our group of 33 includes teenagers, retirees, museum volunteers, geologists, paleontologists, and even a theology professor. Only about half of us have been on digs before, and we are all itching to get our hands dirty. We spend the rest of the evening in song, 2 hours of guitar- and coyote-accompanied ballads, folk tunes, and sing-along classics such as "Dead Skunk skunk, name for several related New World mammals of the weasel family, characterized by their conspicuous black and white markings and use of a strong, highly offensive odor for defense. in the Middle of the Road." Long after we stumble off to our sleeping bags, the coyotes are still singing. MONDAY, JULY 3: We gather at the site to learn some basic digging skills. The standard-issue tools are awls--think ice picks on steroids--and stiff paintbrushes paintbrushes see castilleja. . We aren't to use the awls like ice picks, however--a motion that Murphy refers to as "Hitchcocking." Instead, we are to gently pry apart layers of rock, brushing away the debris and inspecting our work zone regularly so that we won't damage any fossil before we realize it's there. Done right, it's slow going. Poke, pry, sweep, repeat. Fill up a gallon-size scoop with debris, and then dump it in a bucket. Six or eight scoops fill a bucket, and six or eight buckets fill a wheelbarrow. Roll the wheelbarrow downhill, empty it, return to your little section of strata. Fill, roll, empty, repeat. A ton of rock makes a pile much smaller than you'd think. Late in the morning, the theropod tooth comes to light. No other bones of a meat eater have been found at this site, says Murphy. In 2004, Murphy and his colleagues finished unearthing the bones that Hein had found, including four neck vertebrae Vertebrae Bones in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar regions of the body that make up the vertebral column. Vertebrae have a central foramen (hole), and their superposition makes up the vertebral canal that encloses the spinal cord. , a portion of a femur femur (fē`mər): see leg. , and almost a dozen ribs. They identified the dinosaur as a long-necked herbivore herbivore: see carnivore. herbivore Animal adapted to subsist solely on plant tissues. Herbivores range from insects (e.g., aphids) to large mammals (e.g., elephants), but the term is most often applied to ungulates. called a sauropod sauropod Any species of four-legged, herbivorous, saurischian dinosaur in the suborder Sauropoda. The sauropods include the largest of all dinosaurs and the largest land animals that ever lived. , and the team nicknamed it Ralph, after an earlier member of Hein's family whose homestead had been just a few hundred meters from where the Heins had found the dinosaur. During the 2005 field season, the paleontologists unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. seven more neck vertebrae and eventually uncovered Ralph's skull, upside down and half a meter away from the rest of him. Ralph's head had probably rotted off, rolled into that position, and then been buried by an ancient stream. Sauropod skulls are exceedingly rare, says Murphy. The tooth tip that our team found may have broken off as a theropod fed on Ralph's carcass. The femur fragment found 2 years ago showed signs of having been gnawed on, Murphy notes. After our lunch, further excavations near the tooth reveal a 20-cm-long fragment of another of Ralph's ribs. A few other, heavily eroded pieces of dinosaur bone turn up, but Murphy says that they probably aren't Ralph's because his fossil bones are usually in good condition. We also come across plant fossils that may provide clues about the environment in which Ralph died. Cris E. Merta, a geologist from Sheboygan, Wis., notes that at first glance, the plants appear to have been similar to modern-day reeds, so the area may once have been a wetland. The rocks that hold Ralph probably were deposited as sediment sometime between 150 million and 147 million years ago, says Melissa V. Connely, a geologist from Casper College Casper College is a public community college in Casper, Wyoming, USA. The school was founded in 1945. It currently enrolls 4023 students. There are approximately 250 faculty. in Wyoming. TUESDAY, JULY 4: After breakfast, Murphy takes a few of us over to a neighboring ranch. Last year's dig team found a few bones there beneath a light coating of sand, dirt, and bone chips. About 50 m away, the group discovered the end of a 2-m-long femur sticking out Adj. 1. sticking out - extending out above or beyond a surface or boundary; "the jutting limb of a tree"; "massive projected buttresses"; "his protruding ribs"; "a pile of boards sticking over the end of his truck" from the g-round. Our job today is to remove the plaster jacket that has protected that bone during the winter--from harsh weather as well as from the sharp hooves of grazing cows. We'll then dig farther around the bone so that the fossil can be removed later in the week. Because the rock is much harder here than it is at the Ralph quarry, we must learn the basics of using small air hammers driven by compressed air compressed air, air whose volume has been decreased by the application of pressure. Air is compressed by various devices, including the simple hand pump and the reciprocating, rotary, centrifugal, and axial-flow compressors. . We take turns shattering rock. As we work several centimeters away from the femur, we're constantly on the lookout for in search of; looking for. See also: Lookout previously undiscovered bones from the same dinosaur. We also have to be careful not to damage the crumbly end of the bone that had been exposed to the elements before its discovery. The rock at this site breaks into pieces that are thumbnail-size or larger, so it's a challenge to brush them out of the way as we work. Nevertheless, all goes well until one of the team members doesn't lift his heel quite high enough as he steps backward across the femur. Whoops! Because much of the outer surface of the bone had been bonded together with liquid adhesives, a piece of that veneer the size of a legal pad legal pad n. A pad of ruled, usually yellow writing paper that measures 8 1/2 by 14 inches. sloughs off, taking a couple of handfuls of bone chips with it. We stand frozen, mouths agape agape In the New Testament, the fatherly love of God for humans and their reciprocal love for God. The term extends to the love of one's fellow humans. The Church Fathers used the Greek term to designate both a rite using bread and wine and a meal of fellowship that included , and when we turn off the air hammer, the silence is deafening. Then, a series of quietly muttered curses. After taking a minute or so to recover a bit of composure, one of the team members sheepishly sheep·ish adj. 1. Embarrassed, as by consciousness of a fault: a sheepish grin. 2. Meek or stupid. sheep retrieves Murphy from the bone site nearby. We explain what happened, plead contrition con·tri·tion n. Sincere remorse for wrongdoing; repentance. See Synonyms at penitence. Noun 1. contrition - sorrow for sin arising from fear of damnation contriteness, attrition , and brace ourselves for the worst. Obviously disappointed, Murphy stands mute for a few seconds and then says, "That's OK. If anyone ever tells you they've never broken a [dinosaur] bone, then they haven't really been digging." Although this is the first truly sunny day of the week, we work under a cloud for the rest of the day. Except for lunch: As a special treat, Hein has invited the dig team to join his extended family for a Fourth of July Fourth of July, Independence Day, or July Fourth, U.S. holiday, commemorating the adoption of the Declaration of Independence. Celebration of it began during the American Revolution. barbecue, replete with especially refreshing lemonade and watermelon watermelon, plant (Citrullus vulgaris) of the family Curcurbitaceae (gourd family) native to Africa and introduced to America by Africans transported as slaves. Watermelons are now extensively cultivated in the United States and are popular also in S Russia. . Someone breaks out a family photo album and shows us pictures of Ralph, the namesake of the sauropod we're excavating. All too soon, though, we're back at the neighboring ranch, where we break up more rock. We come upon a few more fossils, which fortunately remain intact. After dinner, around the campfire, we learn that discoveries by other team members at the Ralph quarry have slowed to a standstill. However, a few participants roaming the hills about 150 m away have found some fragments of bone, tracked them back to their hillside source, and dug out what appear to be a few tail vertebrae and fragments of a spike from a stegosaur stegosaur Any of the plated dinosaur species, including Stegosaurus, of the Late Jurassic Epoch (159–144 million years ago). Stegosaurs were four-legged herbivores that reached a maximum length of about 30 ft (9 m). The skull and brain were very small. . WEDNESDAY, JULY 5: Today, the center of attention shifts from Ralph to the new stegosaur. Further excavation yields more tail vertebrae as well as some limb and foot bones. This site, which stretches along the hillside no more than 6 m or so, is a flurry of pick-and-shovel activity. The small shelf that we've dug into the hillside can barely accommodate all the dig-team members who want to get in on the action. I take pictures and do my best to stay out of the way. On the third day of the dig, the novelty of excavation has worn off and muscle aches have set in. That evening, we're rewarded by exciting news. Parts of the stegosaur's tail vertebrae that we excavated weren't fused as they would be in an adult, so the creature may have been a juvenile, says Susannah Maidment, a paleontologist from the University of Cambridge in England. Other features of the bones suggest that they represent Hesperosaurus--an exciting possibility, she notes, because only four other fossils of this stegosaur species have been discovered, all of which are in private collections. The one Hesperosaurus that has been described in a journal paper didn't include limb bones, such as the one we've found. THURSDAY, JULY 6: Today at the cozy stegosaur quarry, my fellow diggers Diggers, members of a small English religio-economic movement (fl. 1649–50), so called because they attempted to dig (i.e., cultivate) the wastelands. They were an offshoot of the more important group of Puritan extremists known as the Levelers. and I expose many new bones, including the end of a large one, possibly a femur, that seems to extend quite a distance into the hill. At the dig site on the neighboring ranch, other team members uncover a tangle of bones that will have to be left for another expedition to excavate. Despite the daylong efforts of the two team members who remain faithful to the Ralph site, no bones are forthcoming. "You know what you did today?" Murphy asks them at dinnertime. "You just closed that quarry. You put Ralph to rest." FRIDAY, JULY 7: This morning is a frenzy of activity. We have only half a day in the field, during which we must extract some fossils, jacket others, break camp, and head back to civilization. While some team members sketch the layout of the bones, the less artistic of us--myself included--work with compasses and measuring tapes. A team leader at each site assigns a code number to each bone or assembly, and someone records location data. Small, free-floating bones are wrapped in aluminum foil Noun 1. aluminum foil - foil made of aluminum aluminium foil, tin foil foil - a piece of thin and flexible sheet metal; "the photographic film was wrapped in foil" and labeled. Larger bones are tightly swathed in aluminum foil, then several layers of wet paper towels, then an outer coating of plaster-soaked burlap. Wrestling a fragile, several-hundred-pound lump of stone, bone, and plaster down a steep hill and into the back of a truck is challenging, to say the least. Midafternoon, we head south to Billings. There, for the first time in a week, we can take a shower that is hot and lasts longer than 6 minutes. Then, we get together for dinner at a restaurant. At our final meal as a group, we each speak a few words about the experiences that we've had. Murphy closes out the speeches by telling us how well our diverse group has listened, learned, and come together as a team. He plans to immortalize im·mor·tal·ize tr.v. im·mor·tal·ized, im·mor·tal·iz·ing, im·mor·tal·iz·es To make immortal. im·mor Ralph this fall in a journal paper, giving him a scientific name that will distinguish him in academic circles as a new species. That article will represent a lot of hard work, Murphy notes, adding that we should all proudly consider ourselves a part of the dinosaur-discovery team. SEWING UP CAMP--Teacher Colleen Dundon and others pitch their tents near a dinosaur-dig site on central Montana's 5E Ranch. HACKING AWAY--Behavioral scientist Stephen G. Smith and plaster-mold maker Karl Kockler get into the swing of things while unearthing a stegosaur. AGAINST THE WALL--Paleontologist Adam Stuart Smith and others toil at the quarry, looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. more fossilized remains of Ralph the sauropod. HAVING A BLAST--Science News' Sid Perkins uses an air hammer to fracture rock, and retired geologist Grog Sorlie waits to remove the debris. WHAT'S THIS?--Geologist Cris E. Merta inspects chips of fossilized bone that have eroded from a hillside. "ROUND THE CAMPFIRE--Videographer Nick Mariana and paleontologist Nate Murphy provide fireside entertainment with their musical stylings. GETTING PLASTERED--Amateur paleontologist Kathie Burke and graphic artist Mary Govaars apply a final coat of plaster to a burlap jacket that will protect fossils from being damaged when they're transported from the quarry. DETAILS, DETAILS--Paleontologist Adam Stuart Smith sketches the limb bones of a newly unearthed stegosaur, a drawing that will enable researchers to reassemble re·as·sem·ble v. re·as·sem·bled, re·as·sem·bling, re·as·sem·bles v.tr. 1. To bring or gather together again: reassembled the band for a reunion tour. 2. the fossil when it arrives at a laboratory or museum. |
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