Sep012008

POSTED AT 05:03 PM

Last weekend (August 23-25), I went to upstate New York to visit some friends.  On the way back, we stopped to look for fossils in a couple of places.  One place that we went to was Schoharie, NY; we hadn't been there before.  When we got there, this is what we saw:
 
 
It looked pretty uninteresting at first, but when we started picking up rocks and looking at them, it turned out that nearly every rock had a fossil!  You see, this part of New York was covered by an ocean 420 million years ago, and today's rocks were  ocean mud at that time.  The fossils that we found included a lot of brachiopods, like this:
 
Brachiopods are bilaterally symmetrical; molluscs like clams and oysters are not.  There are a few modern species of brachiopods, but they used to be much more common. 
 
In addition to brachiopods, we found fossil crinoids, or sea lilies, which are related to echinoderms like starfish, and molluscs like clams.  It seemed that every chunk of rock that we picked up was covered in shells and bits of crinoids and coral. 
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Comments

 
  • Brian Mgurn

    Where on a map is this part of New York

    9/4/2008 2:45:01 PM
  • MsFinnerty

    This was Schoharie, NY, which is kind of near Cooperstown. However, most of NY was covered by ancient oceans around 400 million years ago, so there are a lot of places to find fossils. If anyone is interested, I can email you the info that I have.

    9/4/2008 4:23:33 PM
  • Hayley Yates

    Wow! it is amazing that an ocean would have covered up a state that is bustling with people nowadays! I think it is interesting that oysters or clams we have today could have evolved from the brachiopods that you saw! In addition, i have a question, what exactly were the brachiopods? I assume the were some sort of animal, but were they an equivelant to an oyster?

    11/20/2008 8:57:53 PM
  • MsFinnerty

    Yes; brachiopods are very distantly related to clams and oysters. They used to be found in all the oceans, but now are not so common. Apparently 99% of all brachiopod species are now extinct. One brachiopod that you may be familiar with is the lamp shell.


    11/21/2008 9:17:09 AM
 

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