or, Stratigraphic Tales from the Gadsden Purchase
Well, its been a couple of weeks since anything new has popped up at the old HMNH, and I figure its about time I did something to rectify that. A fair amount of stuff has been happened through the month of March, and I’m hoping to get a few posts out in the next week or so to review it all.
First on the list was a little field trip that I took during the middle of the month. For five days I was out poking about some Pennsylvanian strata in the southwestern corner of New Mexico (in what state residents call “the bootheel”) tagging along with a stratigraphic research team led by NMMNH&S curator Dr. Spencer Lucas.

Here’s where we were working, a nice 1500-foot pile of more-or-less neatly stacked Late Paleozoic strata called New Well Peak. This photo was taken from our campsite at the “new” well, which had long since run dry. But the layers of limestone that made up the peak told a tale of when this now-arid parcel of the Gadsden Purchase lay at the bottom of the sea.
Climbing through the strata we came across bits of crinoids, brachiopods, coral, and sponges. We looked for rocks bearing fusilinids, protozoans that lived on the ancient sea bottoms whose fossils are helpful in determining the age of the rocks. The largest of these looked like petrified grains of rice; the smallest were barely visible. This photo shows some of the larger ones we found:

Two members of the team were looking for conodonts as well, or to be more accurate, were looking for rocks that they might be able to find conodont fossils in. Conodonts are known almost exclusively from microscopic teeth, which make them difficult to find in the field. So they collected bags of rocks from outcrops that looked promising, which will go back to laboratories where the fossils could be chemically teased from the rocks and identified under high-powered microscopes. Although it seems like a lot of work for tiny fossils, conodont tooth morphology changed over time, which makes them useful as markers for different time periods. And when enlarged, they are beautiful little sculptures in their own right.
So, between rock samples, conodont samples, and fusilinids, we each carried a heavy load of rocks off the mountain each day. It was an awfully quick way to realize just how out of shape I’ve gotten since my last field outing, but the fresh air, conversation, and stunning scenery made the stiff shoulders and sore feet well worth it.

By the end of the last day, the excellent meal prepared by Chet, the camp cook, is far more interesting than another typical New Mexico sunset.
I didn’t sketch too much on this trip, but I did get one little watercolor of New Well Peak done:

—Matt Celeskey.
File under: Carboniferous, Permian, The Day Job.
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