Earth:Bone Cabin Quarry

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Short description: Dinosaur quarry in Wyoming, U.S.
Bone Cabin Quarry
Bone Cabin Quarry 1898.jpg
Bone Cabin Quarry in its first year of excavation, 1898
Location
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LocationWyoming, U.S.
Coordinates [ ⚑ ] : 41°58′02″N 106°17′28″W / 41.9671°N 106.291°W / 41.9671; -106.291

Bone Cabin Quarry is a dinosaur quarry that lay approximately 55 miles (89 km) northwest of Laramie, Wyoming, near historic Como Bluff. During the summer of 1897 Walter Granger, a paleontologist from the American Museum of Natural History, came upon a hillside littered with Jurassic period dinosaur bone fragments.[1] Nearby was a sheepherder cabin built entirely out of fossil bones, hence the name "Bone Cabin Quarry."[2][3] After Granger's discovery in late August 1897, the quarry was kept secret until early 1898, when the manpower could be amassed to undertake a full-scale excavation. Henry Fairfield Osborn, curator of the American Museum of Natural History headed the expedition.[4] The bones of perfect skeletons lay thickly crowded.[4] (As of 1905), 483 parts of dinosaur were found, packed in 275 boxes with a weight of 100,000 pounds (45,000 kg).[4] The excavation area was only 7,500 square feet (700 m2).[5] Bone Cabin Quarry was excavated from 1898 until 1905, when the productivity of specimens thinned.[6] Some of the dinosaurs found at the Bone Cabin Quarry include Stegosaurus, Allosaurus and Apatosaurus. Gargoyleosaurus is also known from the Bone Cabin Quarry West locality.[7]

The Ornithopod Species Dryosaurus altus is also present in the Bone Cabin Quarry.[8]

From the Annual Field Report of the American Museum of Natural History, 1898:[9]

On June 12th a rich strike was made in opening "Bone Cabin Quarry". This is where the larger part of the year's collection was secured. The work was arduous and additional help was needed. P. Kaisen was engaged at the end of June. The party stayed here until the close of the field season on October 1st.

About 5 miles (8.0 km) southwest of Bone Cabin Quarry, a further quarry, called Nine Mile Quarry, was opened up in June 1899, near Nine Mile Crossing of Little Medicine Bow River. An incomplete Brontosaurus skeleton was recovered.[10]

See also

References

Sources

  • Brinkman, Paul D. (2010). The second Jurassic dinosaur rush : museums and paleontology in America at the turn of the twentieth century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-07473-3. OCLC 671811941. 

Further reading

External links