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Stunning Views of Glacier from Space
Read more: Stunning Views of Glacier from SpaceStunning views of glaciers from space.
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Who Wants to Go to SVP ?(Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Annual Meeting)
Read more: Who Wants to Go to SVP ?(Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Annual Meeting)Can’t go to Bristol England right now? Well then at least read Scott’s comments about SPV at the Burpee Museum of Natural History blog.
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Presentation by Jack Wittry
Read more: Presentation by Jack WittryThanks to Andy Jansen for putting Jack’s slides from his talk last week into a file format that could be easily downloaded. Click here to download (.pdf) (only 5 MB). This document will also be kept on the Mazon Creek Reference page.
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Can You Identify?
Read more: Can You Identify?A reader writes in, “… I have been doing countless web searches in hopes to find someone in IL who can help me out with a rather interesting find (and it looks like I might have found the right people).While I was vacationing down in Northern Florida (around the Jacksonville Area), I came across an large interesting rock washed up on the shore…. I searched online and I couldn’t find anything that matched its size nor its weight (around 30lbs). It has various ‘leaf’ looking things inside it as well as a few different colorations varying from the orange to…
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News for the Younger Members
Read more: News for the Younger MembersA gift idea for those with younger people in their life… the Paleobet poster via Scienceblogs. On the same subject of paleo for the young, the popular band, They Might Be Giants (TMBG), has a fun video and song named “I am a paleontologist”… (this and other songs by TMBG are the Schoolhouse Rock! of our time). And finally, news for the younger ones… from Deseret News via geology.com “…Paleontologist Scott Sampson is about to add one more item to his resume. Monday, the research curator at the Utah Museum of Natural History and adjunct professor in the department of…
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8:00 am – Time for Field Trip
Read more: 8:00 am – Time for Field TripThe meeting time has changed from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. for the field trip on Saturday and Sunday, September 26th and 27th. Find this post informative? Subscribe to this web page by using Notifixious (see the upper, right-hand corner of this screen.) Notifixious will send posts to your email. Another way to subscribe is to subscribe to the web site RSS feed. What is RSS feed? RSS feed is where you choose a feed reader, e.g., My Yahoo or Google Reader, and subscribe to web sites like this site. The web sites send their information to your reader and…
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Supervolcano Rosetta Stone
Read more: Supervolcano Rosetta StoneVia ScienceDaily: "… A fossil supervolcano has been discovered in the Italian Alps' Sesia Valley by a team led by James E. Quick, a geology professor at Southern Methodist University. The discovery will advance scientific understanding of active supervolcanoes, like Yellowstone,…"
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Moon Rock, Not
Read more: Moon Rock, NotVia AP: “…The Dutch national museum said Thursday that one of its prized possessions, a rock supposedly brought back from the moon by U.S. astronauts, is just a piece of petrified wood. Rijksmuseum spokeswoman Xandra van Gelder, who oversaw the investigation that proved the piece was a fake, said the museum will keep it anyway as a curiosity….”
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Science Friday Has 2 Earth Science Interviews
Read more: Science Friday Has 2 Earth Science InterviewsScience Friday, a weekly radio show about science, provided two interesting interviews this week for those interested in the earth sciences: University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno talks about the new tiny T-Rex. Abstract available here. (Photo: Paul Serano via Science Friday.) Don Brownlee, Principal Investigator, NASA’s Stardust Mission and Professor, Department of Astronomy, University of Washington Seattle, Washington talks about samples of comet dust that were returned to Earth embedded in aerogel contained the amino acid glycine, with an isotopic signature that indicates it was not formed on Earth. (Image: NASA/JPL via Science Friday)
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Archaeology Meeting Sat. 9/26 – When Did Alphabet First Appear?
Read more: Archaeology Meeting Sat. 9/26 – When Did Alphabet First Appear?Archaeology Meeting, 7:30 pm, College of Dupage, Building K, Rm 131, “When Did the Alphabet First Appear” by Bryan Nugent and John Good.
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Events Coming Up Next Weekend
Read more: Events Coming Up Next WeekendThere are many interesting events happening the weekend of September 26 – 27. Collecting trips for geodes and Mazon Creek fossils as well as other activities as well.
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African Rockhounds
Read more: African RockhoundsBetsy and I have been members of our local rock club since 1977. The Earth Science Club Of Northern Illinois, ESCONI, played a large role in our family’s lives as the older members shared their finds and their knowledge with Becky and Lisa as they grew into young ladies. So it should come as no surprise that we joined a club in Cape Town this year. The Cape Town Gem and Mineral Club has a narrower scope than ESCONI, focusing on minerals and lapidary. They are quite active, holding monthly sales, swaps, programs and barbeques as well as the occasional…
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Collecting Mazon Creek Fossils Sat 9/26 & Sun 9/27, 2009
Read more: Collecting Mazon Creek Fossils Sat 9/26 & Sun 9/27, 2009Collecting Mazon Creek Fossils Meet at 8:00 A.M. Saturday and or Sunday at the BP Amoco in Coal City. No Age Limit. Hard Hats not required. Boots are recommended. An Estwing rock hammer is the best tool. A small shovel or pick is helpful. Knee pads, backpacks, fanny packs, extra clothes (you will get wet and muddy) are also a plus. Bring a bucket for the fossils. Also bring insect repellant. Note: Field trips are for members only. Collecting from this private property can only be done during the time permitted by the owner for the group. Take I-55 to…
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Report that NPS Has Fewer Geologists
Read more: Report that NPS Has Fewer GeologistsArizona Geology posts about an interesting issue (via geology.com): … The NPS [National Park Service] Geologic Resources Division was not established until the late 1990s and instead of growing, they are shrinking. They are now at 20 people, down 9 in the past few years. Most parks that were designated so because of their geologic attributes do not even have a single geologist on staff. Compare this to something like 800 biologists in the NPS….
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Paleontology Meeting, Sat, 9/19 – Mazon Creek Jellyfish
Read more: Paleontology Meeting, Sat, 9/19 – Mazon Creek JellyfishPaleontology Meeting, 7:30 pm, College of Dupage, Building K – Rm 131. On September 19th, the Paleo study group will begin examining Mazon jelly fish. So bring your Mazon Creek jellyfish – some may be photographed for the new book. Then, on October 17th, the Paleo study group will cover the worms. ESCONI is creating a new Mazon fauna book. Each paleo meeting will be a time for specimens to be photographed for possible inclusion in the new book. So examine your Mazon Creek collections over the next few months and consider any possibilities you may have to contribute to…
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Jack Wittry Presents at the General Meeting on 9-11-09, by Andrew Young
Read more: Jack Wittry Presents at the General Meeting on 9-11-09, by Andrew YoungThere was certainly a back-to-school atmosphere at the General Meeting last Friday, with attending members full of stories and finds after the club’s summer recess. As people paraded into the classroom, many had cardboard trays, specimen cases or plastic bags carrying carefully split fossil concretions pertaining to that evening’s lecture topic. After some special announcements, Jack Wittry, author of the beautiful and informative book entitled, The Mason Creek Fossil Flora, presented a standing-room only talk on his specialty. Not only was his delivery and organization clear – making sense of the, often time, fragmented evidence of the fossil record…
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Micro Meeting Cracks Geodes
Read more: Micro Meeting Cracks GeodesSaturday night the Micromineral groups was busy cracking geodes using a pipe cutter. This method worked well because the pipe cutter cut the geode into two halves – instead of many pieces. Many of the geodes fluoresced – mostly the Mexican geode brought by Kathy. (see below)
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Micro-Mineral Meeting Tonight 9/12 7:30
Read more: Micro-Mineral Meeting Tonight 9/12 7:30MicroMineral Meeting, 7:30 pm, College of Dupage, Building K – Rm 131. The geode splitter will be back, plus a video and a show and tell.
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MicroRNA Used to Track Evolution to Fossils
Read more: MicroRNA Used to Track Evolution to FossilsVia Science News: …. The team’s microRNA sequencing results also agree with the order in which the different annelids and their relatives appear in the fossil record—something that previous hypotheses about their relationships had failed to do, said co-author Derek Briggs, Yale’s Frederick William Beinecke Professor of Geology and Geophysics. “This study is an elegant example of how new methods can reconcile results from molecular sequencing of living animals with information from the fossil record,” he said…









