Showing posts with label Kern River County Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kern River County Park. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Geotripper Missing in Action? Nah, Just on the Road.

If you've noticed a distinct lack of blog updates lately, it's not been for lack of creative ideas. I've actually been in the wild hinterlands of the eastern California desert, specifically Death Valley. We had a marvelous time, but we also experienced a bit of the harshness of the "Broken Land" as Frank DeCourten calls it. There's a bit more cellular and Wi-Fi access in recent years for better or worse, (better for emergency situations), but no time when dealing with a group of students (who were great). Besides, a desert night is meant to be experienced, not ignored in favor of a computer screen. The stars were beyond belief.

In any case, the stories will unfold in the next few blogs. There were some incredible sights, and I look forward to sharing them. Today's picture was a camp visitor on our first night of the trip on the Kern River near Bakersfield.

Sunday, February 21, 2016

Treasures From the Earth in the Great Valley: What the heck was living here?

Standing on a barren hillside east of Bakersfield, one looks over a dry landscape peppered here and there with oil drilling rigs. Because of the recent rains, the grass is green, but roasted brown is normal for these badlands. It's hard, standing in this desert, to visualize that this was once a shallow sea, a sea that was filled with life. 15-16 million years ago, there were ancient species of clams, snails, fish, rays, sharks, dolphins, seals, sea lions, and whales. The nearby coastal plains were populated with horses, camels, primitive species of elephant, and predators who were the ancestors to today's large felines and canines.
The Great Valley began existence as a forearc basin between the volcanic range of the Ancestral Sierra Nevada, and the vast Cascadia trench and subduction zone that formed the western boundary of North America for much of the last two hundred million years. The shallow sea collected sediments from the rising mountains, and the basin floor subsided beneath the weight of the strata. Ultimately, the sediments in the basin reached a thickness of ten miles in the area around Bakersfield. Since a great deal of organic material was present in the rock, oil and natural gas accumulated in traps beneath folds and faults.
The are a few spots were animals died in profusion, or where their carcasses accumulated. One of these is exposed at Sharktooth Hill, a privately owned area where a layer, the Round Mountain Silt, included a 3-4 foot thick horizon full of fossils (collecting is allowed with a fee). A few other slopes provide the occasional sharktooth or bone fragments. The origin of the plentiful fossils has long been a source of speculation. Some of the most reasonable explanations involve "red tides", accumulations of algal toxins in the food chain, and turbidity currents, which may have gathered carcasses in specific areas of the seafloor.
There's no experience quite like finding a fossil for the first time. What child hasn't dug in his or her backyard in the hopes of finding prehistoric creatures? The small bit of fish vertebrae or the diminutive shark tooth might well be a Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton for all a student is concerned. It's a good way to start a field studies course.

We didn't find that gigantic tooth at the top of the post, by the way. There are folks who spend days and weeks digging in the ground for specimens. We met a gentlemen who has worked the site for three months. The tooth may very well be from a Carcharodon megalodon, the legendary Great White Shark relative that reached lengths of as much as 60 feet (18 meters). And no, they don't still exist in today's oceans, despite what the Discovery Channel tells you. Isn't a Great White enough in terms of terror?