Does time travel exist? Maybe.
Take Exit 56 on the New York State Thruway and, in a few short minutes, you can enter what remains of a 380 million-year-old undersea world of Devonian brachiopod, crinoid and trilobite fossils waiting to be found at Penn Dixie Fossil Park and Nature Preserve in Blasdell south of Buffalo.
Celebrating its 28th season, the 54-acre Penn Dixie Fossil Park (site of a former cement quarry that exposed multiple ancient layers of rock) earned the Guinness World Record™ in 2018 for World's Largest Fossil Dig (905 participating diggers) and a 2011 scientific study (published by the Geological Society of America, and authored by Dr. Renee M. Clary, Dept. of Geosciences, Mississippi State University and Dr. James Wandersee, Dept. of Educational Theory, Policy and Practice at Louisiana State University) ranked it the #1 fossil park in the U.S.
"Our trained staff and volunteers can guide your journey through the layers in search of fossils. Penn Dixie is famous for its trilobites - extinct arthropods that dominated the seas for 270 million years - but other fossils are just as plentiful if you know where to look.
"Visitors are welcome to keep any fossils they find, though we do ask for photos of really cool specimens, and offer help with collecting, tools for digging, and cards to help identify your fossils," says Sydney Mecca, marketing and development coordinator for Hamburg Natural History Society/Penn Dixie.
POTATO BUGS OF THE OCEAN
What makes Penn Dixie the perfect family trip?
Its hands-on history recounts how North America and Europe, while still a single submerged land mass south of the equator, hosted reef ecosystems replete with brachiopods, horn corals, and those skittering and scavenging "potato bugs of the ocean, trilobites.
Bu hikaye Rock&Gem Magazine dergisinin May 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Rock&Gem Magazine dergisinin May 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Rockhounding Ohio's Lake Erie Islands
A short ferry boat ride three miles from Ohio’s Lake Erie coastline is South Bass Island, better known as Put-in-Bay or the “Key West of the North.”
Iowa's Hidden Treasures
Exploring Keokuk Geodes: How They're Made & What's Inside
Agatized CORAL
Florida's Collectible State Stone
Rockhounding Florida's Beaches
Beachcombing serene stretches of Florida can reveal fascinating finds like fossilized shark teeth, sea glass, quartz, agate and even coral fragments.
Collecting Staurolite
Hot Spots In Virginia & Georgia
Pecos Valley Diamonds
New Mexico's Ancient Attraction
12 Tips for Rockhounding Tucson's Greatest Shows
Tucson in February becomes the international hub for buying and selling colored gems, rocks, minerals and fossils.
Turquoise in the American Southwest
A Water & Sky Souvenir
Touring Colorado's MINERAL BELT
It's a Showcase of Mining History & Minerals
Geology &Colorado's Taurish Traiks
Most of Colorado’s tourist trains today were originally constructed in the late 1800s to serve the state’s lucrative mining operations.