Dry Dredgers Joint Field Trip/Picnic with
The Kentucky Paleontological Society
June 28, 2008
Central Kentucky

More photos from Tom Bantel!
More photos from Ron Fine

This month the Dry Dredgers rekindled their partnership with sister club, the Kentucky Paleontological Society, as well as continuing their spring field trip series of visiting fossils sites they haven't been to in a while, by repeating our joint June Picnic/Field trip with the KPS (last time was 2004). It is always great to see fellow fossil hunters, especially when these fossil hunters frequent the same rich Kentucky fossil hillsides..

 The day started with a cookout with hamburgers, hot dogs and some great side dishes brought in by the members. Here are some pics of the picnic.
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There is always show and tell with fossils at these events. KPS President Dan Phelps showed us his recent fossil pick-ups and offered free bumper stickers!
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Then we gathered for the fossil trip and Dan explained the sites we were going to visit.
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The first site we visited was a road cut where we broke dolomite to find lots of specimens of the Silurian trilobite Gravicalymene celebra.
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Here are some of the Gravicalymene celebra we found.

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This is a close-up of a tail section (pygidium). 
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Here's a nice example of how breaking dolomite can reveal a trilobite. The rock below is broken but is shown here with both sides put together.
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Here's the same rock showing the inside surfaces. Shown is the positive cast and the negative mold of the back half of a Gravicalymene.
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Ahhh. Not a lost cause. The front half of the trilobite was found and can be glued together easily. Very nice.
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This is great. One member was just turning over rocks in the gutter by the side of the road and found that one side had four or five Gravicalymene casts! Check it out!
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Then, a few minutes later, what I think was a different member (bad reporting on my part), found the negative side of that surface, complete with the four or five Gravicalymene molds. Sweet!
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At our second site we picked up large Favosites Corals from the Late Ordovician Period.
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This next fossil was brought to Tom Bantel and myself for identification during the field trip but could not be sure of the identification on the spot. It is from the same layers in Central Kentucky, on a nearby road cut. So we put the photo online to see if anyone out there can identify it. And Erich of Austin TX wrote in to point out that it's a Ceraurinus icarus! Thanks Erich. He cites Steve Holand's great web site, which has a photo almost exactly like it.
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And YES! Someone found a Cincinnatian trilobite Flexicalymene at the second site.
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Brachiopods were not uncommon. Here's a Hebertella.
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Trace fossils are ubiquitous. This interesting burrow, filled with pyrite and iron, looks like the animal had no idea where he/she was going.
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 Here, also, is Greg Courney's video of this field trip on YouTube.com.

Here are more photos of the trip from Tom Bantel!

Our thanks to Dan Phelps and the many Kentucky Paleontological Society members for making this a very memorable field trip. Hope to see you next year, folks!

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