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Paleontology in Massachusetts

Paleontology in Massachusetts refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of Massachusetts. The fossil record of Massachusetts is very similar to that of neighboring Connecticut.[1] During the early part of the Paleozoic era, Massachusetts was covered by a warm shallow sea, where brachiopods and trilobites would come to live. No Carboniferous or Permian fossils are known from the state. During the Cretaceous period the area now occupied by the Elizabeth Islands and Martha's Vineyard were a coastal plain vegetated by flowers and pine trees at the edge of a shallow sea. No rocks are known of Paleogene or early Neogene age in the state, but during the Pleistocene evidence indicates that the state was subject to glacial activity and home to mastodons. The local fossil theropod footprints of Massachusetts may have been at least a partial inspiration for the Tuscarora legend of the Mosquito Monster or Great Mosquito in New York. Local fossils had already caught the attention of scientists by 1802 when dinosaur footprints were discovered in the state. Other notable discoveries include some of the first known fossil of primitive sauropodomorphs and Podokesaurus. Dinosaur tracks are the Massachusetts state fossil.

The location of the state of Massachusetts

Prehistory Edit

No Precambrian fossils are known from Massachusetts, so the state's fossil record does not begin until the Paleozoic era. During the early part of the era the state was covered by a warm shallow sea. The local brachiopods and trilobites left behind their fossils. The state's Carboniferous rocks are metamorphosed and therefore don't have any fossils. The Permian occupies a gap in the state's rock record because at that time local sediments were being eroded away rather than deposited. During the Cretaceous period the area now occupied by the Elizabeth Islands and Martha's Vineyard were a coastal plain near a shallow sea. Flowering plants and pine trees grew on this plain. The ensuing Tertiary period of the Cenozoic era is another gap in the state's rock record. Nevertheless, during the Pleistocene epoch glaciers intruded into the state. The sediments they deposited preserved mastodons and molluscs at Cape Cod.[2]

History Edit

Indigenous interpretations Edit

The local fossil theropod footprints of Massachusetts may have been at least a partial inspiration for the Tuscarora legend of the Mosquito Monster or Great Mosquito in New York. The story of the Great Mosquito describes it as having a wingspan as wide as three men, a long beak with sharp teeth, claws as long as arrows, a body the size of the bear and leaving birdlike footprints about twenty inches long. It killed many people and when it swooped down on Native forts its large wings made a loud noise. The sky spirit killed the Great Mosquito at the salt lake near Onondaga, where the local Onondaga and Cayuga people examined its remains. The area became known as the Place Where the Great Mosquito Lies. The birdlike footprints in the legend resemble those left by theropod dinosaurs. However, since there are no Mesozoic strata nearby to preserve them the footprints inspiring the story may have been observed elsewhere in New England, like Massachusetts, where they are quite abundant.[3]

Scientific research Edit

 
Negative Grallator showing skin impressions

Among the earliest major fossil discoveries in Massachusetts occurred during the spring of 1802, when Pliny Moody uncovered a piece of reddish sandstone with bird-like three toed footprints while ploughing on his father's farm in South Hadley.[4] More fossil footprints were discovered a few decades later, in 1835. At the time, the town of Greenfield Massachusetts was laying paving when residents noticed footprints on the sandstone slabs that resembled those of turkeys. The rocks used in the project had been excavated at Turners Falls, and this location would turn out to be the most productive dinosaur tracksite in the Connecticut Valley.[5] Later that year, the fossil footprints discovered while paving in Greenfield were brought to the attention of local naturalist and physician James Deane, whose curiosity was piqued.[6] Deane wrote a letter to Amherst College geology professor Edward B. Hitchcock.[6] Hitchcock spent the rest of the summer traveling through the Connecticut Valley examining the fossil footprints.[7] The next year Hitchcock wrote a scientific paper on the fossil footprints of the Connecticut Valley; he thought the tracks were made by giant birds.[8] Later, in 1843, James Deane began publishing on the Connecticut Valley track fossils with a paper in the American Journal of Science.[8] In 1847 the ichnospecies Otozoum moodi was named after Pliny Moody.[4]

In the mid-nineteenth century came an 1855 discovery by William Smith, Esquire. Smith noticed fossil bones uncovered in the process of blasting for renovations to the water shops of the US Armory at Springfield, Massachusetts. Many of the fossils had already been removed.[9] General Whitney, who was in charge of the armory, ordered that the remaining fossils be re-examined. William Smith showed the leftover fossils to Edward Hitchcock.[10] Hitchcock gave the fossils to Jeffries Wyman. the remains included eleven vertebrae, most of a hand, a partial pelvis and hind limb.[11] Later that year, the Appleton Cabinet was built by Amherst College to house the dinosaur tracks collected and studied by Edward Hitchcock.[12] In 1858, Hitchcock published again on the Connecticut Valley fossil footprints. Still interpreting them as bird tracks, he classified the trackmakers based on whether their toes were thick or narrow.[8] Hitchcock died in 1864.[13] The next year, a posthumous supplement to Hitchcock's 1858 Ichnology of New England was published.[14] In 1865, the fossils uncovered at the Armory in Springfield were finally given a name. In England, Sir Richard Owen examined the fossils and named them Megadactylus polyzelus.[11]

 
Restoration of Anchisaurus.

Massachusetts paleontology saw major events occur early in the twentieth century as well. In 1904, Richard Swann Lull published his first study of the Connecticut Valley fossil footprints.[15] Five years later Massachusetts paleontologist Mignon Talbot became the first woman elected to the Paleontological Society,[16] and during October of the next year, Mignon Talbot discovered a partial dinosaur skeleton in a gravel pit near the South Hadley Center belonging to John A. Boynton. The discovery has been called "the most prized specimen" in Mount Holyoke College's geological museum.[16] It has also been regarded as the last major find in the "Connecticut Valley 'bone rush'".[17] That December, Talbot gave a presentation to the Paleontological Society about her dinosaur discovery in South Hadley. She interpreted the skeleton as belonging to an herbivore.[18] The next year Mignon Talbot collaborated with Richard Swann Lull collaborated on a description for the recently discovered dinosaur at South Hadley. They corrected Talbot's previous misidentification of the specimen as an herbivore and reclassified it as a theropod. They named it Podokesaurus holyokensis.[18] Six years later, a fire consumed Williston Hall at Mount Holyoke College, destroying the bones of Podokesaurus holyokensis. However, casts previously taken of the bones survive in Yale's Peabody Museum and New York's American Museum of Natural History.[18]

Almost two decades later, Carlton S. Nash discovered Early Jurassic dinosaur footprints in Portland Formation rock near South Hadley, not far from Pliny Moody's early dinosaur discovery.[19] Around 1939 Nash bought the site of his 1933 dinosaur footprint discovery starting Nash Dinosaurland and selling dinosaur tracks to a worldwide market.[20]

People Edit

Births Edit

Natural history museums Edit

Private and commercial enterprises Edit

  • Nash Dinosaurland[20]

Events Edit

  • East Coast Gem, Mineral & Fossil Show[21]

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Murray (1974); "Massachusetts", page 156.
  2. ^ Springer and Scotchmoor (2010); "Paleontology and geology".
  3. ^ Mayor (2005); "Fossil Footprints", pages 47-48.
  4. ^ a b Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", page 58.
  5. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", pages 58-59.
  6. ^ a b Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", page 59.
  7. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", pages 59-60.
  8. ^ a b c Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", page 60.
  9. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "The East Coast Awakes", page 72.
  10. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "The East Coast Awakes", pages 72-73.
  11. ^ a b Weishampel and Young (1996); "The East Coast Awakes", page 73.
  12. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "The Great Institutions", page 79.
  13. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", page 61.
  14. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "Footprints in Stone", pages 60-61.
  15. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "More Early Footprints", page 61.
  16. ^ a b Weishampel and Young (1996); "The Dinosaur Lady", page 81.
  17. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "The Dinosaur Lady", pages 80-81.
  18. ^ a b c Weishampel and Young (1996); "The Dinosaur Lady", page 82.
  19. ^ Weishampel and Young (1996); "More Early Footprints", page 66.
  20. ^ a b Weishampel and Young (1996); "More Early Footprints", pages 66-68.
  21. ^ Garcia and Miller (1998); "Appendix B: Major Fossil Shows", page 195.

References Edit

  • Garcia; Frank A. Garcia; Donald S. Miller (1998). Discovering Fossils. Stackpole Books. pp. 212. ISBN 0811728005.
  • Mayor, Adrienne. Fossil Legends of the First Americans. Princeton University Press. 2005. ISBN 0-691-11345-9.
  • Murray, Marian (1974). Hunting for Fossils: A Guide to Finding and Collecting Fossils in All 50 States. Collier Books. p. 348. ISBN 9780020935506.
  • Springer, Dale, Judy Scotchmoor. July 15, 2010. "Massachusetts, US." The Paleontology Portal. Accessed September 21, 2012.
  • Weishampel, D.B. & L. Young. 1996. Dinosaurs of the East Coast. The Johns Hopkins University Press.

External links Edit

  • Geologic units in Massachusetts
  • Paleoportal: Massachusetts

paleontology, massachusetts, refers, paleontological, research, occurring, within, conducted, people, from, state, massachusetts, fossil, record, massachusetts, very, similar, that, neighboring, connecticut, during, early, part, paleozoic, massachusetts, cover. Paleontology in Massachusetts refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U S state of Massachusetts The fossil record of Massachusetts is very similar to that of neighboring Connecticut 1 During the early part of the Paleozoic era Massachusetts was covered by a warm shallow sea where brachiopods and trilobites would come to live No Carboniferous or Permian fossils are known from the state During the Cretaceous period the area now occupied by the Elizabeth Islands and Martha s Vineyard were a coastal plain vegetated by flowers and pine trees at the edge of a shallow sea No rocks are known of Paleogene or early Neogene age in the state but during the Pleistocene evidence indicates that the state was subject to glacial activity and home to mastodons The local fossil theropod footprints of Massachusetts may have been at least a partial inspiration for the Tuscarora legend of the Mosquito Monster or Great Mosquito in New York Local fossils had already caught the attention of scientists by 1802 when dinosaur footprints were discovered in the state Other notable discoveries include some of the first known fossil of primitive sauropodomorphs and Podokesaurus Dinosaur tracks are the Massachusetts state fossil The location of the state of Massachusetts Contents 1 Prehistory 2 History 2 1 Indigenous interpretations 2 2 Scientific research 3 People 3 1 Births 4 Natural history museums 5 Private and commercial enterprises 6 Events 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksPrehistory EditNo Precambrian fossils are known from Massachusetts so the state s fossil record does not begin until the Paleozoic era During the early part of the era the state was covered by a warm shallow sea The local brachiopods and trilobites left behind their fossils The state s Carboniferous rocks are metamorphosed and therefore don t have any fossils The Permian occupies a gap in the state s rock record because at that time local sediments were being eroded away rather than deposited During the Cretaceous period the area now occupied by the Elizabeth Islands and Martha s Vineyard were a coastal plain near a shallow sea Flowering plants and pine trees grew on this plain The ensuing Tertiary period of the Cenozoic era is another gap in the state s rock record Nevertheless during the Pleistocene epoch glaciers intruded into the state The sediments they deposited preserved mastodons and molluscs at Cape Cod 2 History EditIndigenous interpretations Edit The local fossil theropod footprints of Massachusetts may have been at least a partial inspiration for the Tuscarora legend of the Mosquito Monster or Great Mosquito in New York The story of the Great Mosquito describes it as having a wingspan as wide as three men a long beak with sharp teeth claws as long as arrows a body the size of the bear and leaving birdlike footprints about twenty inches long It killed many people and when it swooped down on Native forts its large wings made a loud noise The sky spirit killed the Great Mosquito at the salt lake near Onondaga where the local Onondaga and Cayuga people examined its remains The area became known as the Place Where the Great Mosquito Lies The birdlike footprints in the legend resemble those left by theropod dinosaurs However since there are no Mesozoic strata nearby to preserve them the footprints inspiring the story may have been observed elsewhere in New England like Massachusetts where they are quite abundant 3 Scientific research Edit Negative Grallator showing skin impressionsAmong the earliest major fossil discoveries in Massachusetts occurred during the spring of 1802 when Pliny Moody uncovered a piece of reddish sandstone with bird like three toed footprints while ploughing on his father s farm in South Hadley 4 More fossil footprints were discovered a few decades later in 1835 At the time the town of Greenfield Massachusetts was laying paving when residents noticed footprints on the sandstone slabs that resembled those of turkeys The rocks used in the project had been excavated at Turners Falls and this location would turn out to be the most productive dinosaur tracksite in the Connecticut Valley 5 Later that year the fossil footprints discovered while paving in Greenfield were brought to the attention of local naturalist and physician James Deane whose curiosity was piqued 6 Deane wrote a letter to Amherst College geology professor Edward B Hitchcock 6 Hitchcock spent the rest of the summer traveling through the Connecticut Valley examining the fossil footprints 7 The next year Hitchcock wrote a scientific paper on the fossil footprints of the Connecticut Valley he thought the tracks were made by giant birds 8 Later in 1843 James Deane began publishing on the Connecticut Valley track fossils with a paper in the American Journal of Science 8 In 1847 the ichnospecies Otozoum moodi was named after Pliny Moody 4 In the mid nineteenth century came an 1855 discovery by William Smith Esquire Smith noticed fossil bones uncovered in the process of blasting for renovations to the water shops of the US Armory at Springfield Massachusetts Many of the fossils had already been removed 9 General Whitney who was in charge of the armory ordered that the remaining fossils be re examined William Smith showed the leftover fossils to Edward Hitchcock 10 Hitchcock gave the fossils to Jeffries Wyman the remains included eleven vertebrae most of a hand a partial pelvis and hind limb 11 Later that year the Appleton Cabinet was built by Amherst College to house the dinosaur tracks collected and studied by Edward Hitchcock 12 In 1858 Hitchcock published again on the Connecticut Valley fossil footprints Still interpreting them as bird tracks he classified the trackmakers based on whether their toes were thick or narrow 8 Hitchcock died in 1864 13 The next year a posthumous supplement to Hitchcock s 1858 Ichnology of New England was published 14 In 1865 the fossils uncovered at the Armory in Springfield were finally given a name In England Sir Richard Owen examined the fossils and named them Megadactylus polyzelus 11 Restoration of Anchisaurus Massachusetts paleontology saw major events occur early in the twentieth century as well In 1904 Richard Swann Lull published his first study of the Connecticut Valley fossil footprints 15 Five years later Massachusetts paleontologist Mignon Talbot became the first woman elected to the Paleontological Society 16 and during October of the next year Mignon Talbot discovered a partial dinosaur skeleton in a gravel pit near the South Hadley Center belonging to John A Boynton The discovery has been called the most prized specimen in Mount Holyoke College s geological museum 16 It has also been regarded as the last major find in the Connecticut Valley bone rush 17 That December Talbot gave a presentation to the Paleontological Society about her dinosaur discovery in South Hadley She interpreted the skeleton as belonging to an herbivore 18 The next year Mignon Talbot collaborated with Richard Swann Lull collaborated on a description for the recently discovered dinosaur at South Hadley They corrected Talbot s previous misidentification of the specimen as an herbivore and reclassified it as a theropod They named it Podokesaurus holyokensis 18 Six years later a fire consumed Williston Hall at Mount Holyoke College destroying the bones of Podokesaurus holyokensis However casts previously taken of the bones survive in Yale s Peabody Museum and New York s American Museum of Natural History 18 Almost two decades later Carlton S Nash discovered Early Jurassic dinosaur footprints in Portland Formation rock near South Hadley not far from Pliny Moody s early dinosaur discovery 19 Around 1939 Nash bought the site of his 1933 dinosaur footprint discovery starting Nash Dinosaurland and selling dinosaur tracks to a worldwide market 20 People EditBirths Edit Henry Nathaniel Andrews was born in 1910 Frank M Carpenter was born in 1902 Preston Cloud was born in West Upton on September 26 1912 Joseph Pitty Couthouy was born in Boston on 6 January 1808 James Hall paleontologist was born in Hingham on September 12 1811 David M Raup was born in Boston in 1933 Charles Abiathar White was born in North Dighton on January 26 1826 Samuel Wendell Williston was born in Boston on July 10 1851 Natural history museums EditAmherst College Museum of Natural History Amherst Berkshire Museum Pittsfield Cape Cod Museum of Natural History Brewster Harvard Museum of Natural History Cambridge Marion Natural History Museum Marion Museum of Science Boston Natural Science Museum in Hinchman House Maria Mitchell Association NantucketPrivate and commercial enterprises EditNash Dinosaurland 20 Events EditEast Coast Gem Mineral amp Fossil Show 21 See also Edit Paleontology portal United States portalPaleontology in Connecticut Paleontology in New Hampshire Paleontology in New York Paleontology in Rhode Island Paleontology in VermontFootnotes Edit Murray 1974 Massachusetts page 156 Springer and Scotchmoor 2010 Paleontology and geology Mayor 2005 Fossil Footprints pages 47 48 a b Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone page 58 Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone pages 58 59 a b Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone page 59 Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone pages 59 60 a b c Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone page 60 Weishampel and Young 1996 The East Coast Awakes page 72 Weishampel and Young 1996 The East Coast Awakes pages 72 73 a b Weishampel and Young 1996 The East Coast Awakes page 73 Weishampel and Young 1996 The Great Institutions page 79 Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone page 61 Weishampel and Young 1996 Footprints in Stone pages 60 61 Weishampel and Young 1996 More Early Footprints page 61 a b Weishampel and Young 1996 The Dinosaur Lady page 81 Weishampel and Young 1996 The Dinosaur Lady pages 80 81 a b c Weishampel and Young 1996 The Dinosaur Lady page 82 Weishampel and Young 1996 More Early Footprints page 66 a b Weishampel and Young 1996 More Early Footprints pages 66 68 Garcia and Miller 1998 Appendix B Major Fossil Shows page 195 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paleontology in Massachusetts Wikisource has original works on the topic Paleontology in the United States Massachusetts Garcia Frank A Garcia Donald S Miller 1998 Discovering Fossils Stackpole Books pp 212 ISBN 0811728005 Mayor Adrienne Fossil Legends of the First Americans Princeton University Press 2005 ISBN 0 691 11345 9 Murray Marian 1974 Hunting for Fossils A Guide to Finding and Collecting Fossils in All 50 States Collier Books p 348 ISBN 9780020935506 Springer Dale Judy Scotchmoor July 15 2010 Massachusetts US The Paleontology Portal Accessed September 21 2012 Weishampel D B amp L Young 1996 Dinosaurs of the East Coast The Johns Hopkins University Press External links EditGeologic units in Massachusetts Paleoportal Massachusetts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paleontology in Massachusetts amp oldid 1063958827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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