Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
Biology
BiologyBotanyMicrobiologyEntomologyEvolutionPaleontology
Chemistry
General ChemistryAnalytical ChemistryElectrochemistryOrganic Synthesis
Earth Science
GeologyMineralogyOceanographyMeteorologyEarthquakes
Physics
General PhysicsResearchRelativityParticle PhysicsElectromagnetismFusionOpticsAcousticsNew Theories

Natural Science Forum / Biology / Paleontology / April 2005



Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.

"Fossils In Death Valley National Park" Returns

Thread view: 
Enable EMail Alerts  Start New Thread
Thread rating: 
Inyo - 03 Mar 2005 15:00 GMT
After several months in hiatus, my page "Fossils In Death Valley
National Park" has finally returned to the Net at
http://members.aol.com/Waucoba5/dv/dvfossils.htm . It's back in
essentially its original format, with lots of images of fossils
observed within the boundaries of the Death Valley--plus, photographs
of fossil specimens found in nearby, neighboring areas outside the
park: specifically, in Inyo County, California, and Esmeralda County,
Nevada. I've also included beaucoup images of scenic spots within the
park, links to paleontology-related pages, links to Death Valley and
several of my virtual field trips--visits to various places of special
paleontological interest, such as the world-famous Sharktooth Hill bone
bed, the Kettleman Hills, Pleistocene Lake Manix, Aldrich Hill (in
Nevada, where 35 species of fossil plants can be found), and a place
outside Death Valley National Park, on the Mojave Desert, where
trilobites can be collected.
Eric G. Taylor - 03 Mar 2005 16:56 GMT
That is one heck of a nice web page, inyo.

Very well done!

Eric G. Taylor
FFinF
(Finding Fossils in Florida)

> After several months in hiatus, my page "Fossils In Death Valley
> National Park" has finally returned to the Net at
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> outside Death Valley National Park, on the Mojave Desert, where
> trilobites can be collected.
Don Kenney - 23 Apr 2005 07:44 GMT
It's a gorgeous website.  One very minor point.  I tried this morning
to look at USGS Bulletin 1928 on the Ammonites at Union Wash subpage
and found that all the links to individual pages seem to be broken.
Since I don't seem to be able to send eMail from this PC this week and
I'm not in a mood to figure out why just now, I thought I'd mention
the problem here in case Inyo is not aware of it.

>That is one heck of a nice web page, inyo.
>
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
>> outside Death Valley National Park, on the Mojave Desert, where
>> trilobites can be collected.
Inyo - 23 Apr 2005 22:47 GMT
> It's a gorgeous website.  One very minor point.  I tried this morning
> to look at USGS Bulletin 1928 on the Ammonites at Union Wash subpage
> and found that all the links to individual pages seem to be broken.
> Since I don't seem to be able to send eMail from this PC this week and
> I'm not in a mood to figure out why just now, I thought I'd mention
> the problem here in case Inyo is not aware of it.

Thanks so much for the very kind words. And that was one great catch,
indeed. Apparently, I had neglected to upload the html pages to
accompany the images already in the Web Space--ergo, every link was
broken; problem has been fixed, I do believe. Thank you much for
pointing out the broken links! The web page in question, by the way, is
http://members.aol.com/Waucoba7/uw/usgsbulletin.html . As Don pointed
out, this is an online version of USGS Bulletin 1928, "Stratigraphy of
the Lower And Middle(?) Triassic Union Wash Formation, East-Central
California," by Paul Stone, Calvin H. Stevens, and Michael J. Orchard.
The authors investigate the ammonoid-bearing Union Wash Formation.

> >That is one heck of a nice web page, inyo.
> >
[quoted text clipped - 19 lines]
> >> outside Death Valley National Park, on the Mojave Desert, where
> >> trilobites can be collected.
 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage

Start New Thread
Enable EMail Alerts
Rate this Thread



©2009 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.