My top 20 most important fossil sites
I have made my decision. I've basically gone for (what I believe is) a good mix of age, geography and recency of discovery/time of greatest interest. In chronological order, oldest first.
1. Ediacara Hills, Australia- Geologic period and biota named after them
- Amongst earliest unequivocal evidence of multicellular life
- True affinity of the frond-like taxa still disputed (possible early animals or something altogether unique)
- Precambrian sediments that include embryos of earliest animals
- Astonishing preservation (embryos have perhaps the lowest preservation potential of any living thing!) at very important and poorly understood point in animal evolution
- Most famous of several Cambrian lagerstatte (sites of exceptional fossil preservation)
- Soft-bodied preservation of diverse taxa
- Important window on the early diversification of animal life
- Ordovician age, perhaps the period when biodiversity increased most rapidly
- Important site for early vertebrate evolution with soft tissue preservation of the conodont animal as well as various arthropods
- Unique form of preservation: fossils have to be destroyed to reveal their affinity (successive slices are ground away and a picture taken leading to a exquisite 3D reconstructions)
- Some of the rarest fossils known from here (e.g. one of only 4 sea spiders known from last 500 million years)
- Only real lagerstatte from whole of Silurian
- Exact location a secret
- Volcanic preservation of Devonian lake biota
- Predates vertebrate colonisation of land and is one of the earliest terrestrial ecosystems preserved
- Plants, fungi and terrestrial invertebrate fossils
- Fantastic 3D preservation of reef fossils
- Particularly important site for fish, with muscles and nerves preserved in microscopic detail
- Carboniferous age
- Preserves both land and sea floras and faunas as casts
- Extremely diverse (hundreds of species known)
- Preserves forests of ‘coal age’ (Carboniferous) in situ
- UNESCO world heritage site
- One of the longest periods of continuous sedimentation (Permian through Triassic)
- Spans largest ever mass extinction (“When Life Nearly Died”)
- Famous for showing step-like evolution of mammals
- Historically important to founding of palaeontology and geology
- Abundant marine fossils of Jurassic age (e.g. ammonites, belemnites)
- Marine reptiles also found here most famously by Victorian collector Mary Anning
- Late Jurassic age
- Lagoonal deposit with very rare fossils
- Forever associated with most iconic fossil of all: Archaeopteryx
- Late Jurassic age
- Abundant dinosaurs (Allosaurus – most completely known carnivorous dinosaur, Stegosaurus and various iconic sauropods)
- Historically of interest in ‘bone wars’ between Cope and Marsh
- Still important field site at present day
- Fantastically diverse terrestrial biota of Early Cretaceous age
- Includes almost all known feathered dinosaurs, which have proved instrumental in closing the morphological gap between dinosaurs and birds
- Many other rare finds include: gliding lizards, two-headed reptile, early birds
- Early Cretaceous inland sea deposits
- Includes fish, many pterosaurs (a very rare fossil elsewhere), insects, turtles, plants and various invertebrates
- Eocene age
- Extremely rich preservation of fossil fish: literally millions of specimens
- Consequently rare acts are preserved, e.g.:
- One fish preserved midway through eating (swallowing) another
- A stingray giving (live) birth
- Eocene age
- Diverse terrestrial biota
- UNESCO world heritage site
- Oligocene to Miocene age
- Dominican amber, unlike Baltic amber, is clear and so fossil inclusions are more easily seen
- Insects and spiders common, but a lizard has also been found
- ‘As is’ preservation as tree sap has unique bacteria-killing property that means even the bacteria present inside the individual prior to death are unable to effect decay
- Various fossil hominid sites spanning over 2 million years of human evolution
- Includes fossils (Australopithecus africanus) as well as evidence of cave dwelling, fire domestication etc.
- UNESCO world heritage site
- 40,000 to 25,000 years old
- Fossils preserved in tar pits many of which are still bubbling up out of the ground
- Many, many fossils of dire wolfs, sabre-tooth cats etc.
- Specimens from here in many museums around world (if you’ve seen a sabre-tooth cat it is almost certainly from here)
- Located close to downtown LA!
4 comments:
Slight correction: The La Brea tar pits are not in downtown L.A., but in Miracle Mile, in the Mid-Wilshire area. It's a heavily developed (and affluent) area, but it's not downtown.
Thanks. I have updated it. (Should know better as it is the only one I have been too!)
Heh, no worries, L.A. is a really spread-out city with lots of areas that look like a downtown. More confusingly, it contains whole cities with their own downtowns (e.g., downtown Culver City).
That and the Morrison are the only ones I've been to, although I've probably seen Green River outcrops and not realized it.
nice list, but no Chengjiang?
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