Category: Fossils

Behind the Scenes at the American Museum of Natural History

The American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) curates more than 33 million specimens. Yet, visitors only get to see a tiny fraction of these on display. Even the Fossil Halls, one of the largest museum exhibits in the world, contains just 600 or so of the museum’s finest specimens. These specimens may be the most beautiful and complete, but what about the millions of specimens behind the scenes?

Most visitors don’t realize that museums require huge storage space to curate many times the number of objects on display. These storage spaces may not appear exciting at first glance, but this is where paleobiologists learn the most about Earth’s past. Rows and rows of cabinets, shelving units, and crates contain the data that support scientific research. It’s critical that the collections are maintained so that if one scientist wants to check the reproducibility of another scientist’s work, the specimens are available for testing. When new specimens are added to the collection, we can test those specimens to see if previous conclusions still hold up. Then, scientists are able to use the same collections to test more questions and add to our knowledge.

This summer, I was given access to the AMNH collections for my oreodont research and got to see some of those specimens behind the scenes. Oreodonts are a diverse group of prehistoric herbivores found only in North America. It’s easy to remember their name if you like Oreo cookies. They exhibit different body forms at different times and survived for more than 30 million years. Some look like a pig, but others have traits that are cat-like or tapir-like. We now know they were most closely related to camels. Robert Bruce Horsfall’s reconstructions of what oreodonts may have looked like were published with Malcolm Rutherford Thorpe’s research in 1913. Thorpe and Horsfall looked at some of the same fossils I am using in my research.

Promerycochoerus carrikeri is pig-like (top), Eporeodon socialis is cat-like (bottom left), and Brachycrus laticeps is tapir-like (bottom right). Sketches by Robert Bruce Horsfall.

Though extinct today, oreodonts are the most common mammal fossils found in Eocene and Oligocene deposits. It’s hypothesized that there may be a connection between grassland expansion in the Miocene and their extinction seven million years ago. It is surprising that not even one of such an apparently diverse group survived while camelids, horses, and peccaries survived through the Miocene into the Pleistocene. I’m researching changes in oreodont body forms during grassland expansion to try to understand why oreodonts disappeared from the west-central Great Plains about eight million years ago. This research will help us understand more about extinction and which mammals species may be more at risk today.

The oreodont collections at the AMNH are extensive. There are 240 cabinets of fossils containing as many as 9 drawers of fossils in each cabinet. Specimens that are too large to be stored in the cabinets are cataloged on shelving units. The specimens are generally organized in the order they evolved (as understood at the time the specimens were added to the cabinets). So as I work through the collection, I get to observe oreodont morphology, oreodont body forms, at different snapshots in time. This type of research depends on large collections like this one. It’s an exciting place to be!

Paleobotany in Patagonia, Argentina

A labor of love. Anna Whitaker, undergraduate assistant from Penn State, on right, helps to catalogue some of the 1200+ specimens from Río Picheleufú.

After more than four weeks of investigating the Museo Paleontológico Bariloche Río Pichileufú collection at the Museo Paleontológico Egido Feruglio in Trelew Argentina, my husband and I explored the Iberá Wetlands in Corrientes Province, Argentina.

One of the many traditional roadside shrines to Gauchito Gil, a beloved Argentine folk saint who took from the rich to give to the poor.

A raptor’s welcome to the wetlands

Jorge, our guide to the wetlands, is the son of the first park ranger at Lagunas Ibera surrounding Colonia Carlos Pellegrini. It was an honor to learn from him in his family tradition.

During the day, the caiman are pretty relaxed and we were safe in the large rowboat. Things got much more interesting at dusk when we took out a small canoe to observe their evening activities.

life in Argentina’s wetlands…

Making sure to get back and check in with the Park Rangers as the sun sets.

Making sure to get back and check in with the Park Rangers as the sun sets.

Geology in Utah as an Undergraduate at Southern Utah University

The geology of Utah is incredible, and there’s no place better than Southern Utah University (SUU) to get your undergraduate degree right there amidst some of the best geology in the world!

Studying by Firelight

Studying for classes at SUU doesn’t get any better than this!

 

You know you’re in the right place when crinoid fossils are jumping out at you like this. Standing beneath the waves in what was once of a vast ocean.

I don’t think Dr. MacLean knew we would take him so seriously when he told us to make sure we had everything we need for field lab that hot, fall day. Great times!

Field work doesn’t always have to be hard.  Coral Gardner recording data with me along Leeds Creek. This research contributed to my senior research project.

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A beautiful day hiking to the fossil quarry.  Don’t laugh, but our packs are full of huge rolls of toilet paper.  It’s what we use to protect plant fossils in transit.

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My geologic partner in crime, Kate Kupfer, asked me to check out petrified ripples at her family’s property on Cedar Mountain.  Layers and layers of tidal events had been pushed 10,000 feet above sea level.

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A cool summer evening on the back of Aquarius Plateau amidst an oasis of life at 9000 feet. A weekend spent exploring the effects of elevation on diversity.

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Who needs raindrops on roses when you can have raindrops petrified with mud cracks! A true indicator of seasonality–monsoons followed by extended dry periods.

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One day a visitor came to inspect our work.  It was all fun and games while we could see her(?).  But things got a little uneasy when we lost track of her whereabouts (rattlesnake centered in the photo). Fortunately, the day ended well for all of us. We got our work done, and the rattlesnake mosied off to a more quiet location.

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Why is Geoscience Important to All of Us?

What processes form these iron balls filled with sand?

What complex processes formed these iron balls filled with sand? Moqui balls may provide information about life on other planets.

Being a geoscientist is not just a career, it’s a way of life. We ask many of the big questions that young children ask, but then put those questions through rigorous testing to understand the world around us. Many of our questions are complex and require a combined knowledge of physics, chemistry, biology, computational methods, and more. But that’s what keeps us going. We each specialize in a particular field of geoscience and collaborate with other scientists around the world to get meaningful answers. Then we apply that knowledge in ways that are useful to support day-to-day and long-term decision-making for all of us.

To ensure scientific integrity, both the tests we use and our interpretation of the results are critically assessed by experts in the field. Only after this process, are the tests, results, and interpretations recognized and recorded in the scientific literature. Due to the complexity of geoscience, this information is often presented to the public as levels of risk or the likelihood of a potential event or effect. It’s not possible to determine that an earthquake will happen on a specific date or that climate will change by an exact number of degrees (at least not yet!). Individuals, organizations, businesses, and policy-makers can then use this information to make informed decisions about risk, which resources we use, where and how we build infrastructure, how to avoid costly disasters, as well as how we affect Earth’s biosphere and ourselves.

A late Cretaceous flower that lived just six million years before the extinction that killed the non-avian dinosaurs. Perhaps a dinosaur stopped to smell this flower before it fell to the ground and was buried in flood plain sediments.

A late Cretaceous flower that lived just six million years before the extinction that killed the non-avian dinosaurs. Perhaps a dinosaur stopped to smell this flower before it broke off, fell to the ground, and got buried in floodplain sediments.

As an evolutionary paleoecologist in the geosciences, the research I do investigates the role diversity plays in evolution. I ask questions like:  “How do we measure diversity?”  “How do we observe and test diversity in the fossil record?”  “When is diversity resistant to change and when is diversity vulnerable to change?”   When we consider that one-two million years is the average mammal species lifespan and that we (Homo sapiens sapiens) have only existed two-three hundred thousand years, we begin to understand the importance of these questions. We still have at least 700,000 years to go just to be average!

My interest in science communication is to make scientific research more accessible so those without a science background can decide for themselves when someone is not telling the whole story or twisting the facts to suit their cause. This is why it is also important to foster young minds in the sciences so that there is always someone to help future generations test the data and share results so that the public can make informed decisions.

Please enjoy quick science insights and adventures in science posted on this page. Access to my research and other efforts in science communication are also available through this site. Have a question? Send it to me by email (clairecleveland@psu.edu), and I’ll try to answer it or find an expert who can!

Fifth-graders visit Penn State to learn about the earth sciences and do authentic research in paleoecology.

Fifth-graders visit Penn State to learn about the earth sciences and do authentic research in paleoecology.

Voila!

Late Cretaceous flower on shoot

Late Cretaceous flower on shoot

The site is officially complete…at least its baseline format.  In celebration, a photo of the first significant find I collected with the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.  Thank you for the experience Dr. Ian Miller and Dr. Jennifer Hargrave!

 

 

 

 

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