In the Footsteps of the Early Bone Diggers: Locating Historic Photographic Sites in the Bridger Basin of SW Wyoming and Badlands National Park, SD
June 7th (Tuesday), 6 p.m., Via Zoom (online) & Live at Teton County Library. Open to Public.
Presentation: “In the Footsteps of the Early Bone Diggers: Locating Historic Photographic Sites in the Bridger Basin of Southwest Wyoming and Badlands National Park, South Dakota”
Presented by Emmett Evanoff, University of Northern Colorado
The early vertebrate paleontologists and geologists of the late 1800s and early 1900s did not have detailed topographic maps or aerial photographs to locate their fossil localities or geologic features. However, they did employ photographers to take images of the intricately eroded badlands where they found fossils. The earliest of these photographs, taken between 1868 and 1870, were to provide the public a visual record of the bizarre erosional features of the badlands. These photographs supplemented the geologic survey’s annual reports so that Congress would grant their yearly funding. By the earliest twentieth century, scenic photographs started to take a secondary role to documenting fossil localities. These photographs now provide not only a historical record of the early surveys; they also provide the only record of the precise locations of important fossil localities, many of which were type localities of important fossil vertebrates. These photographs record landform changes over the past century, including erosion of the badlands, erosion of stream valleys, and, in some cases, deposition of sediments at the base of the badlands. Finally, the photographs also show historic camps providing a view of what working in the field was like in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The examples used in this presentation are from the Bridger basin of southwestern Wyoming and Badlands National Park in South Dakota. taken, in part, from the photograph archives of the U.S. Geological Survey and the American Museum of Natural History. In all cases the site my colleagues and I have found the photograph site locations, documented the photo sites, and have taken modern images to see the changes in the landscape.
1920 | 2016 |
Topic: In the Footsteps of the Early Bone Diggers
Time: June 7th, 2022 06:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
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