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Ichnofossils at the WPL EarthCache

Hidden : 10/14/2018
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
1 out of 5

Size: Size:   other (other)

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Geocache Description:


What is a Fossil?

Fossils are the physical evidence of former life from a time prior to recorded human history.    These are prehistoric evidence that includes the fossilized remains of living organisms including impressions and moulds of their physical form and in many cases marks or traces created in sediment by their activities. 

 

How do fossils form?

Fossilization is the process by which a plant or animal becomes a fossil. This process is extremely rare and only a small fraction of the plants and animals that have lived in the past 600 million years are preserved as fossils. This may be surprising, considering the millions of fossils that have been collected over the years, and the many billions still in the rocks. Those plants and animals that do become fossils generally undergo, with some exceptions, several key steps.

 

Process of fossilization

 

  1. First, the soft tissue that exists during life decays leaving behind only the "hard parts" (bone, shell, teeth).
  2. Hard parts may be transported and broken. This causes the fossilized remains to be incomplete representations of the living animal. It is much more common to find a fragment of shell or bone than it is to find a complete skeleton.
  3. Hard tissues become buried and altered. In most cases this involves destroying the original material from which the hard parts were made as minerals are slowly dissolved and replaced by new ones. Sometimes a hard part is dissolved without being replaced by new material, leaving behind only an impression or mold of the original animal. If this mold is filled with sediment that is later cemented into rock it will make a cast of the original animal.

 

 

There are two main types of fossils: body fossils and trace fossils.

Body Fossils

  • Body fossils include any part of the actual animal or plant. Things like bones, teeth, shells, and leaves are considered body fossils.

    Trace Fossils, or Ichnofossil

  • give us proof of animal life from the past. Trace fossils include things like foot prints, burrows, and fossilized poop.
  • Trace fossils provide paleontologists with evidence of the activities of ancient animals - something body fossils simply can't do. Trace fossils are formed in place and can therefore tell us about the ancient environment in which the animal lived.

    One single animal can make thousands and thousands of traces in its lifetime, but it will only leave behind one body when it dies. Because of this, trace fossils are much more common than body fossils.

    Trace fossils are moments of time that have been captured forever in the rock record. They are a celebration of life.

    Some examples:

    • Track: an impression made by a single foot
    • Trackway: a number of tracks made during a single trip
    • Trail: an impression made by an animal without legs
    • Burrows: a hole or holes an animal dug into loose sediment (like mud)
    • Borings: a hole or holes an animal dug into a hard substrate (like wood or rock)
    • Eggs and Nests: shells that at one time would have contained babies and the nests that the babies would have been kept in
    • Coprolites: poop that has become fossilized.   The world’s largest collection of coprolites can be seen at the South Florida Museum in Bradenton. Dubbed the “poozeum,” the amazing collection boasts 1277 coprolites, found across eight countries and 15 states
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      Logging Requirements

      This earthcache is located at the Whitby Public Library.   You do not have to enter the library to  visit this earthcache.  There are two locations you will need to visit to answer the questions.  Parking is available to the south and east of the library.  There is limited free parking to the south and pay and display parking to the east.

      To Log this earthcache

      Please send me your answers within 4 days of posting your found log. If there is more than one cacher in your party, include the names in your group. Only one person needs to send me the group answers. No spoiler photo's please. Found logs posted without proof you visited the site will be deleted.

      Questions

      Visit the posted coordinates and look at the tiles on the ground to the south of the entrance

      1.  You should be able to see evidence of fossils in the tiles.   From the examples listed in the narrative, what type of fossils can you see?   

      2.   Give me the name of one type of fossil you found and estimate the length of the fossil.    For example if you found a track fossil, estimate the length of the track.  If you found a body fossil, what are its dimension?

      Waypoint 2

      Proceed to the north side of the Library and look at the sedimentary tiles. 

      3.   Look for tiles that show impressions of a fossil.     They may be tiny so look closely.  Do you see evidence of the fossil body, either an impression or a fossil body or both?

      4.   In your own words, describe any type of fossil you observe while looking at the different tiles.   How large or small would you say was the creature that left behind these traces of ancient life?

      5. Optional: Photos are not required however add to the experience of visiting an earthcache. Please post a photo of your favorite fossil tile with your GPS, hand, foot or something interesting.

      References:

      1. http://geology.isu.edu/Alamo/fossils/process_fossilization.php

      2. http://www.virtualmuseum.ca/sgc-cms/expositions-exhibitions/fossiles-fossils/english/sections/whatare.html

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Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Ybbx sbe gur ynetre cnivat fgbarf gung ner yvtug tenl, abg gur fznyy qnex gvyrf.

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)