By: GeneCooper
Image: Gene Cooper
⧉
Subject:
Stonerose Interpretive Center & Eocene Fossil Site
⧉
License:
Copyright, All Rights Reserved
Uploaded: 1 Nov 2017
Last Updated: 1 Nov 2017
5.54 gigapixels
131,834 x 41,998 pixels
439.4 in X 140.0 in at 300dpi
5,852 pixels per inch
Made using 8,526 photos
14 rows |
29 columns |
21 stacks
Stonerose is the name of a fossil site, a place where impressions of plants, insects, and fish that lived millions of years ago can be found in shale. These fossils are the result of events that happened long before there were people to observe them. The organisms found at Stonerose lived nearly 50 million years ago, in a time known as the Eocene Epoch. At that time, the area now occupied by the City of Republic was part of an ancient lake. Over many years, layers of sediment built up on the lakebed. Much of this material was powdery ash from volcanic activity occurring in the area. These layers of the old lake bottom can be seen today as layers of fine-grained tuffaceous shale, volcanic ash hardened into sedimentary rock. The layers of shale split apart like pages in a book revealing fossils and information about the ancient lake and its surrounding vegetation. Within these layers, the insects and fish that drifted to the lake bottom, and the leaves and twigs that floated downstream or blew into the lake can now be seen as fossils.