| NATIONAL PARKS QUICKLINKS |
Backpacker Magazine – October 2001
You could be walking on an ancient seabed or a swamp where dinosaurs played. Look closely and you'll see history in the rocks.
Sunlight filtering through the trees spotlighted an odd chunk of gray limestone on the Rough Trail in Kentucky's Daniel Boone National Forest. Unusual-looking rings pocked the rock's surface. I peered closely at it. The entire rock looked like a bowl of buttons compressed into stone. Then it hit me: This wasn't an ordinary hunk of rock; it was a crinoid, an example of native Kentucky fauna entombed in rock.
Finding fossils brings ancient history to life and makes a routine hike feel like a stroll through Jurassic Park. The remains of plants and animals buried millions of years ago can reveal how life evolved, what strange shrubs grew alongside today's trail, and whether dinosaurs patrolled the land. The fossil of the flowerlike crinoid, for example, indicated that the Rough Trail was under an ocean 330 million years ago. "The crinoid would stick out its feathery pinnules to get plankton drifting by, then ease the food to its mouth," explains John David McFarland, the Arkansas Geological Commission's paleontologist and a fan of hiking fossil trails.
To be a successful amateur paleontologist, you need to understand the terrain. For instance, fossils exist only in sedimentary rock-layers of sediment that preserved plants and animals and then were compacted into rock. Arizona's Grand Canyon, a mecca of sedimentary rock layers, is home to countless fossils. On the other hand, the volcanic rock common in California's Sierra Nevada and Washington's Cascades won't yield a single relic.
Since sedimentary rock covers 75 percent of the Earth's surface, any hike will likely lead you past the three most-fossiliferous types:
Field guides to fossils, such as the National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Fossils, by Ida Thompson (Alfred A. Knopf, 800-733-3000; www.backpacker.com/bookstore; $19), help match prehistoric creatures to bedrock age or type. In preparation for your hunt, train your eyes to spot specific shapes in the field by studying specimens at visitor centers, museums, or rock shops.
"When you're looking for (particular) fossils, you should know the age of the rock" that will house the fossil, says Vincent Santucci, chief ranger and paleontologist for Fossil Butte National Monument, Wyoming. "Over the past 600 million years, many different creatures have come and gone. If you're looking for dinosaurs, don't look in beds that have trilobites, because they didn't coexist."

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