ESCONI Gem, Mineral, and Fossil Show

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  • ESCONI Field Trip to the Winfield Mounds “Walking with the Ancestors” – Saturday, May 9th, 2026
    There will be a field trip to the Winfield Mounds on Saturday, May 9th, 2026. Meet at Hedge’s Station in Winfield, IL. at 1:00 PM. We will be departing from the meeting spot at 1:15 PM. The field trip ends around 3:00 PM. This guided nature-and-culture hike offers participants an immersive journey through the Winfield Mounds—one of DuPage County’s most significant Indigenous archaeological landscapes—situated along the dynamic ecotones of the West Branch of the DuPage River. Blending natural history with archaeological insight, the experience highlights how ancient peoples selected, shaped, and understood this riverine environment.

esconi.info@gmail.com

Field trips require membership, but visitors are welcome at all meetings!

Friday, April 10thGeneral Meeting – 8:00 PM via Zoom.

Jessica Hull will present “Life in the Devonian Period, The Age of Fishes.”
Saturday, April 11thJunior Study Group Meeting – 2:00 PM, in person at the College of DuPage Technical Education Center (TEC) Building – Room 1038A (Map).

Katherine Howard will present on Sand and Sediment Collecting.

Specifics of this meeting are available from Scott Galloway, 630-670-2591,  gallowayscottf@gmail.com.
Saturday, April 18thPaleontology Study Group – 7:30 PM via Zoom and in person at the College of DuPage, TEC, Room 1038B (Map).

Keith Robitschek will present “Digging the Marl of the Lance Formation.”
Friday, April 24thMAPS Expo XLVII – Springfield, IL.
Saturday, April 25thMAPS Expo XLVII – Springfield, IL.
Sunday, April 26thMAPS Expo XLVII – Springfield, IL.
No meeting this monthMineralogy Study Group
  • Mazon Monday #305: Herdina mirificus
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    Mazon Monday #305: Herdina mirificus

    This is Mazon Monday post #305.  What’s your favorite Mazon Creek fossil?  Tell us at  email:esconi.info@gmail.com. Herdina mirificus is an extinct species of short-winged insect, currently classified in the order Protorthoptera. Protorthoptera is an extinct lineage of insects that lived during the middle to late Pennsylvanian Period some 318 to 299 million years ago. The order is a bit of a waste basket, containing a paraphyletic assemblage of basal neoptera. The namesake for Herdina mirificus is Jerry Herdina, a prolific Mazon Creek collector who donated his collection to the Field Museum in 1974 (see Mazon Monday #226). Jerry Herdina (1905-1974)…

    Read more: Mazon Monday #305: Herdina mirificus
  • PBS Eons: How Brawn Led to Brains

    PBS Eons: How Brawn Led to Brains

    PBS Eons has a new video. This one is about the evolution of brains. While we often think of brains as some kind of triumph over brawn, it turns out that those two things might not be mutually exclusive, and in fact, they’ve been linked for far longer than we might imagine. PBS Member Stations rely on viewers like you. To support your local station, go to http://to.pbs.org/DonateEons

    Read more: PBS Eons: How Brawn Led to Brains
  • There’s Something MUCH Bigger Than Yellowstone. And It Will Happen Again

    There’s Something MUCH Bigger Than Yellowstone. And It Will Happen Again

    PBS Terra has an interesting video about super volcanoes and they larger cousin… Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs). Yellowstone was massive. Roughly a thousand times larger than the eruption of Mt. St. Helens, the biggest eruption in the history of the continental United States. And if Yellowstone erupted again, the consequences for the U.S. and the world would be devastating. But there’s something far bigger than Yellowstone. Something so powerful it’s been linked to nearly every mass extinction in Earth’s history. And astonishingly, most people have never heard of it. In this episode of Weathered, we explore the true giants of…

    Read more: There’s Something MUCH Bigger Than Yellowstone. And It Will Happen Again
  • Fossil Friday #300: Orthotarbus robustus from the River
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    Fossil Friday #300: Orthotarbus robustus from the River

    This is the “Fossil Friday” post #300.  Expect this to be a regular feature of the website.  We will post fossil pictures you send in to esconi.info@gmail.com.  Please include a short description or story.  Check the #FossilFriday Bluesky/Twitter hash tag for contributions from around the world! Is there a better way to post our 300th Fossil Friday than with a Mazon Creek spider? This beautiful spider is an Orthotarbus robustus. It was described by Alexander Petrunkevitch in 1945. Technically, O. robustus isn’t a spider. It belonged to a an extinct group of spider-like animals called Architarbids.  Architarbids lived during the Mississippian and…

    Read more: Fossil Friday #300: Orthotarbus robustus from the River
  • Throwback Thursday #300: Poem… The Rockhound

    Throwback Thursday #300: Poem… The Rockhound

    This is Throwback Thursday #301. In these, we look back into the past at ESCONI specifically and Earth Science in general. If you have any contributions, (science, pictures, stories, etc …), please send them to esconi.info@gmail.com. Thanks!  email:esconi.info@gmail.com. We have a poem this week. This poem appeared in the July 1970 edition of the ESCONI newsletter. It was written by T.O Garrett of the Willipaw Harbor Gem & Mineral Society. Unfortunately, there is no evidence for the Willipaw Harbor Gem & Mineral Society, but there is a region of Washington State called Willapa Harbor. Below is a photo of the Port…

    Read more: Throwback Thursday #300: Poem… The Rockhound
  • This Dinosaur Really Knew How to Get a Grip

    This Dinosaur Really Knew How to Get a Grip

    The New York Times Trilobites column has an interesting story about a tiny egg stealing dinosaur that lived about 67 million years ago in what is now Mongolia. Manipulonyx reshetovi had a strange spike-covered hand, which provided its genus name meaning “manipulating claw”. The animal’s fossil was discovered in 1979 and described in the journal Proceedings of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences last December. “I’ve honestly never been more flabbergasted by any dinosaur fossil,” said Stephen Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh who was not involved in the study. At first glance, he wondered…

    Read more: This Dinosaur Really Knew How to Get a Grip
  • ESCONI January 2026 Paleontology Meeting – January 17th, 2026 at 7:30 PM – “Getting Lost Can Lead to Treasure – Edrioasteroids”

    ESCONI January 2026 Paleontology Meeting – January 17th, 2026 at 7:30 PM – “Getting Lost Can Lead to Treasure – Edrioasteroids”

    Jack Kallmeyer President of the Dry Dredgers will present “Getting Lost Can Lead to Treasure – Edrioasteroids – What to Do When You Find Thousands”. The meeting will be held on January 17th, 2026 at 7:30 PM. While growing my early collection in the Cincinnatian, one of the most desired fossils that I sought after was the Edrioasteroid. While not really rare (if you count fragmentary finds), nice complete specimens tend to be elusive. I took detailed notes and directions given at a Dry Dredgers club lecture to a site where whole specimens had been found. I missed the field…

    Read more: ESCONI January 2026 Paleontology Meeting – January 17th, 2026 at 7:30 PM – “Getting Lost Can Lead to Treasure – Edrioasteroids”
  • Mazon Monday #304: Field Museum… Illinois by the sea
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    Mazon Monday #304: Field Museum… Illinois by the sea

    This is Mazon Monday post #304.  What’s your favorite Mazon Creek fossil?  Tell us at  email:esconi.info@gmail.com. In May 1970, the Field Museum opened an exhibit about Mazon Creek. It was called “Illinois by the sea: a coal age environment” and ran from May 25th until September 25th. It was a successful exhibit that featured Field Museum fossils and contributions from ESCONI members. Many familiar names were among the contributors. There was an announcement in the ESCONI newsletter in September 1970. DON’T MISS THIS FIELD MUSEUM EXHIBIT!–via Terry Wolfe Inaugurated May 25th to become the newest exhibit at the Field Museum,…

    Read more: Mazon Monday #304: Field Museum… Illinois by the sea
  • NPR Short Wave: The dinosaur secrets found in the archives of a natural history museum

    NPR Short Wave: The dinosaur secrets found in the archives of a natural history museum

    NPR’s Short Wave show has an episode about dinosaurs at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh. What happens behind the scenes of a dinosaur exhibit? Short Wave host Regina Barber got to find out … by taking a trip to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh. In the museum’s basement, she talked to a paleobiologist, checked out a farmland fossil find and even touched a 67 million-year-old bone. Because, as it turns out, there’s a lot of science that can be found in a museum basement. Learn more about the Carnegie Museum of Natural History’s exhibit “The Stories…

    Read more: NPR Short Wave: The dinosaur secrets found in the archives of a natural history museum
  • The Year in Neanderthals

    The Year in Neanderthals

    The New York Times has a nice article that highlights new understanding into who the Neanderthals were. Neanderthals lived across Eurasia for hundreds of thousands of years before going extinct some 40,000 years ago. A bunch of new high profile studies were published in 2025. Barely three decades ago, these ancient hominids were still being widely depicted as knuckle-dragging brutes that were too dimwitted for moral or religious concepts, probably lacking language and behaviorally less advanced than modern humans. The picture changed considerably in 2010 after the Max Planck Institute published the complete Neanderthal genome, which revealed that people of European…

    Read more: The Year in Neanderthals
  • Fossil Friday #299: Annularia sphenophylloides
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    Fossil Friday #299: Annularia sphenophylloides

    This is the “Fossil Friday” post #299.  Expect this to be a regular feature of the website.  We will post fossil pictures you send in to esconi.info@gmail.com.  Please include a short description or story.  Check the #FossilFriday Bluesky/Twitter hash tag for contributions from around the world! Today, we have another beautiful contribution from George Witaczek.  This time it’s a beautiful Annularia sphenophylloides (see Mazon Monday #123) is another Mazon Creek favorite. They are almost always preserved with 3 dimensions, as is this one. Thanks for sharing, George! Annularia sphenophylloides is a smaller variety of Annularia, which were the “leaves” of Calamites.  It was described in…

    Read more: Fossil Friday #299: Annularia sphenophylloides
  • Throwback Thursday #299: Macfallite
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    Throwback Thursday #299: Macfallite

    This is Throwback Thursday #299. In these, we look back into the past at ESCONI specifically and Earth Science in general. If you have any contributions, (science, pictures, stories, etc …), please send them to esconi.info@gmail.com. Thanks!   email:esconi.info@gmail.com. This post is a follow up to last week’s Throwback Thursday, where we mentioned the mineral species Macfallite. It was named for Russell P. MacFall (1903-1983). MacFall was an editor for the Chicago Tribune newspaper and, earlier, for other newspapers. He was an amateur mineralogist interested in systematic mineralogy and an author of six books on popular mineralogy, paleontology, and geology. Russell did…

    Read more: Throwback Thursday #299: Macfallite
  • WHY DINOSAURS? Award-Winning Dinosaur Documentary!

    WHY DINOSAURS? Award-Winning Dinosaur Documentary!

    The award winning documentary “Why Dinosaurs” is now available on Youtube! The documentary covers quite a bit of the history and the science of paleontology. Did I mention that ESCONI’s own Rob Sula has his own segment? Oh, there’s also a great website – whydinosaurs.com. The website has extended interviews and other extras! Check it out! An award-winning documentary about dinosaurs and the people who love them. From prestigious museums and universities to blockbuster films, amusement park rides, video games, and toys—dinosaurs have fascinated us for generations. But… why? WHY DINOSAURS? follows dino-obsessed teen James Pinto and his filmmaker father…

    Read more: WHY DINOSAURS? Award-Winning Dinosaur Documentary!
  • ESCONI January 2026 General Meeting – January 9th, 2026 at 8:00 PM – “Fossil Birds of Wyoming”

    ESCONI January 2026 General Meeting – January 9th, 2026 at 8:00 PM – “Fossil Birds of Wyoming”

    Jean-Pierre Cavigelli, of Casper College in Casper, WY, will present “Fossil Birds of Wyoming”. Wyoming is well known for its fossils of all kinds. Dinosaurs are probably the most famous. They were first discovered here in the late 1800’s and are still being uncovered and studied nowadays. Fossil fishes from the southwest corner of the state are mined by the thousands and sold in rock shops all over the world. Wyoming also has great deposits of fossil mammals, and reptiles such as crocodiles and turtles. But what about birds? In general, bird fossils are generally very uncommon. This is mainly…

    Read more: ESCONI January 2026 General Meeting – January 9th, 2026 at 8:00 PM – “Fossil Birds of Wyoming”
  • Mazon Monday #303: Happy 60th Birthday, Tully Monster!
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    Mazon Monday #303: Happy 60th Birthday, Tully Monster!

    Happy 60th Birthday to the Tully Monster! Well, actually tomorrow is the day. And, I guess technically it’s really been 307 – 309 million years, but who’s really counting. Eugene Richardson, Jr., who first called it “Mr. Tully’s monster”, described the animal in the paper “Pennsylvanian invertebrates of the Mazon Creek Area, Illinois: the morphology and affinities of Tullimonstrum”, which was published on March 24th, 1966 in the journal Fieldiana.

    Read more: Mazon Monday #303: Happy 60th Birthday, Tully Monster!
  • Adam Savage at the American Museum of Natural History

    Adam Savage at the American Museum of Natural History

    The AMNH has a new exhibit called “Impact: The End of the Age of Dinosaurs”. Adam Savage visited the museum just before the exhibit opened in November, There are a series of videos on Youtube. How do you come up with the physical representation of animals we know lived on Earth, when the evidence of their existence is limited to bone, footprints and skin impressions at best? How do you decide on color? Pose? Scale? Even setting? At the ‪@AmericanMuseumofNaturalHistory‬, curator/paleontologist Roger Benson and senior principal preparators Rebecca Meah and Jake Adams talk to Adam Savage about how they came…

    Read more: Adam Savage at the American Museum of Natural History
  • PRI’s Wonderful Life

    PRI’s Wonderful Life

    Here’s a followup to the New York Times’ post about the Paleontological Research Institution (PRI) and the Museum of the Earth’s financial woes… they found funding and will continue operation! By late summer, although gifts continued to arrive at roughly twice the rate of previous “normal” years, larger gifts had slowed and we were still about $1 million away from being able to pay off our mortgage. But in early October one of our Board members wrote a short letter to The Ithaca Times, and this resulted in a front page story. At around the same time, we hired a…

    Read more: PRI’s Wonderful Life
  • Fossil Friday #298: Seed Fern Fiddlehead – Spiropteris
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    Fossil Friday #298: Seed Fern Fiddlehead – Spiropteris

    This is the “Fossil Friday” post #298.  Expect this to be a regular feature of the website.  We will post fossil pictures you send in to esconi.info@gmail.com.  Please include a short description or story.  Check the #FossilFriday Bluesky/Twitter hash tag for contributions from around the world! This week’s Fossil Friday features a fiddlehead — the coiled frond of a young fern. This specimen comes from a seed fern, most likely Neuropteris. At Mazon Creek, fiddleheads are assigned to the species Spiropteris sp. (see Mazon Monday #207). This breathtaking specimen comes from Jeremy Zimmerman. Thanks for sharing, Jeremy!

    Read more: Fossil Friday #298: Seed Fern Fiddlehead – Spiropteris
  • Spinosaurus relative longer than a pickup truck stalked Thailand’s rivers 125 million years ago

    Spinosaurus relative longer than a pickup truck stalked Thailand’s rivers 125 million years ago

    LiveScience has a story about a spinosaur that lived in Thailand 125 million years ago, during the early Cretaceous Period. The animal was about 25 feet long (7-8 meters) and likely ate the fish that swam in the rivers. The new dinosaur has yet to be named and was discovered in the Sam Ran locality of the Khok Kruat rock formation in northeastern Thailand. “This discovery from Thailand helps us better understand what spinosaurines looked like and how they evolved in Asia,” Adun Samathi, an assistant professor at the Walai Rukhavej Botanical Research Institute and Mahasarakham University in Thailand, told Live…

    Read more: Spinosaurus relative longer than a pickup truck stalked Thailand’s rivers 125 million years ago