Current:Home > My"Extremely rare" Jurassic fossils discovered near Lake Powell in Utah: "Right place at the right time" -AssetLink
"Extremely rare" Jurassic fossils discovered near Lake Powell in Utah: "Right place at the right time"
View
Date:2025-04-24 22:36:20
A field crew studying fossil tracks near Lake Powell recently discovered an "extremely rare" set of prehistoric fossils along a stretch of the reservoir in Utah, officials announced on Friday. The crew of paleontologists was documenting tracksites last spring when they came upon the unusual find: a tritylodontid bonebed in the Navajo Sandstone in Utah.
It was the first tritylodontid bonebed discovered there, the National Park Service said in a news release. The park service called the find "one of the more important fossil vertebrate discoveries in the United States this year." The bonebed included "body fossils," like bones and teeth, which are rarely seen in the Navajo Sandstone, a geologic formation in the Glen Canyon area that are typically seen in southern Utah.
"This new discovery will shed light on the fossil history exposed on the changing shorelines of Lake Powell," the park service said. Lake Powell is a major artificial reservoir along the Colorado River that runs across southern Utah and into Arizona.
Paleontologists discovered the bonebed in March of this year. While documenting tracksites along Lake Powell, the crew found a rare group of fossils with impressions of bones, and actual bone fragments, of tritylodontid mammaliaforms. The creatures were early mammal relatives and herbivores most commonly associated with the Early Jurassic period, which dates back to approximately 180 million years ago. Scientists have estimated that mammals first appeared on Earth between 170 million and 225 million years ago, so the tritylondontid creatures would have been some of the earliest kind.
Field crews were able to recover the rare fossils during a short 120-day window during which they could access the location in the Navajo Sandstone, the park service said, noting that the site "had been submerged by Lake Powell's fluctuating water levels and was only found because the paleontologists were in the right place at the right time before annual snowmelt filled the lake." Another rare bonebed was found nearby in the Kayenta Formation, which is slightly older than the sandstone where the tritylondontid discovery was made, according to the park service.
"The crew collected several hundred pounds of rocks encasing the fossil bones and skeletons at the site," the agency said. Those rocks will be scanned using X-ray and computerized tomography at the University of Utah South Jordan Health Center before being studied further at the St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm by laboratory and collections crew volunteers. The Petrified Forest National Park and the Smithsonian Institution will support the project as the fossils become part of the Glen Canyon National Recreation Area museum collections.
"Studying these fossils will help paleontologists learn more about how early mammal relatives survived the mass extinction at the end of the Triassic Period and diversified through the Jurassic Period," the National Park Service said.
- In:
- National Park Service
- Utah
- Fossil
veryGood! (41386)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- S&P 500 notches first record high in two years in tech-driven run
- Sundance Film Festival turns 40
- Todd Helton on the cusp of the Baseball Hall of Fame with mile-high ceiling broken
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Navajo Nation 'relieved' human remains didn't make it to the moon. Celestis vows to try again.
- Opinion: George Carlin wasn't predictable, unlike AI
- '1980s middle school slow dance songs' was the playlist I didn't know I needed
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Michael Jackson Biopic Star Jaafar Jackson Channels King of Pop in New Movie Photo
Ranking
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- A British politician calling for a cease-fire in Gaza gets heckled by pro-Palestinian protesters
- Alabama five-star freshman quarterback Julian Sayin enters transfer portal
- North Korea stresses alignment with Russia against US and says Putin could visit at an early date
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Massachusetts man brings his dog to lotto office as he claims $4 million prize
- An unknown culprit has filled in a Chicago neighborhood landmark known as the ‘rat hole’
- Sen. Tim Scott to endorse Trump at New Hampshire rally on Friday, days before crucial primary
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Air pollution and politics pose cross-border challenges in South Asia
Opinion: George Carlin wasn't predictable, unlike AI
Sports Illustrated lays off most or all of its workers, union says
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Kansas couple charged with collecting man’s retirement while keeping his body in their home 6 years
Adam Harrison, a son of ‘Pawn Stars’ celebrity Rick Harrison, has died in Las Vegas at age 39
Caffeine in Panera's Charged Lemonade blamed for 'permanent' heart problems in third lawsuit