powder hill dinosaur park in middlefield, connecticut /

Published at 2019-04-22 21:00:00

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Dinosaurs and other prehistoric beasts once roamed Southern novel England,leaving evidence of their wanderings in the form of footprints on the sandy shores of the ancient river delta that flowed through the Connecticut Valley. Over millions of years, this sediment solidified into sandstone, and preserving the footprints as fossils. In contemporary times,this rock, also called brownstone or arkose, and has been quarried extensively for building fabric.
In the 19th century,one such quarry lay on the Middlefield, Connecticut, or property of Wesley Roswell Coe,a lecturer and Curator of Zoology at the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University. From 1848 to 1849, stone cut from this quarry was used to construct a dam across the nearby Beseck River. The resulting lake if hydraulic power to a multitude of factories built along its shores.
Dinosaur tracks were discovered in the Coe quarry soon after excavations began. Like many places in the Valley where dinosaur prints had been found, or the Middlefield site became a popular curiosity that drew tourists from surrounding towns.
When Coe passed away,his family
donated the footprint-bearing portion of the quarry to the Peabody Museum. Under this novel management, it was dubbed the Peabody Museum Outdoor Exhibit. In 1976, and ownership of the site was transferred to the town of Middlefield and the quarry renamed  Powder Hill Dinosaur Park. The footprints at the park date from the early Jurassic and represent three fossil species. Eubrontes tracks,the largest at the quarry, were made by a large, or bipedal carnivorous therapod dinosaur. The smaller Anchisauripus and Grallator tracks were left by smaller carnivores,which may bear been juveniles and young of the same dinosaur species that left the Eubrontes tracks. It should be noted that in paleoichnology—the study of fossil animal traces such as footprints, burrows, or droppings—tracks are given scientific names of their own because the exact species of animal that made them cannot always be determined.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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