Fossil Discoveries in the Painted Desert at Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona
During the late Triassic Era, this land was humid and tropical, located near the equator. The area of the national park was a large river system with a huge conifer forest (which ultimately became the Petrified Forest). The late Triassic was the dawn of the age of the dinosaurs but it was a time when large reptiles and amphibians dominated the landscape. During the 1980's scientists discovered Coelophysis (left) here at the park. At the time it was thought to be the first dinosaur to walk the earth. Older dinosaurs have since been discovered elsewhere but Coelophysis remains one of the earliest. However most animal fossils found at Petrified Forest are reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates. (Continued below...)
(Note: All photos below courtesy of the National Park Service.) In 2005, Petrified Forest National Park is participating in an exhibition at the Department of the Interior Museum in Washington, DC. The huge phytosaur skull (right) will be on display for the year, then returned to the park's Rainbow Forest Museum in 2006. This particular fossil was discovered in 1985 and excavated a year later.
The "armor-plates" were actually thick pieces of bone which covered the aetosaur. A single animal
had about one hundred plates in four rows. These thick plates are rather common fossils from the Triassic
Era. However they are generally found scattered; a whole aetosaur skeleton is quite rare. In March 2002,
an aetosaur dig was conducted at the park. The photo at left shows paleontologists working at the
excavation site where part of a fossil skeleton was found.
Several strange species of fish have been found in the Painted Desert area, including fresh water sharks, lungfish, and coelecanth which is still found in the world today. At right, a modern day animal at Petrified Forest, a pronghorn. Petrified Forest National Park offers supplemental information on their ancient animals. Read their site bulletin on "Triassic Dinosaurs and Other Animals" or read more about Fossil Discoveries in the Painted Desert.
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Adventuring in Arizona
The authoritative guide to outdoor adventure in the wild and beautiful Grand Canyon State. Wildflowers of the Desert Southwest
by Meg Quinn
In Wildflowers of the Desert Southwest, Meg Quinn helps even the most amateur botanist to identify more than eighty-five of the most common and showy species found in the Sonoran Desert. Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum Book of Answers Everything you wanted to know about the Sonoran Desert. The Painted Desert is a narrow, crescent shaped arc, about 160 miles long which begins about 30 miles north of Cameron near Grand Canyon, and swings southeast just beyond Petrified Forest National Park. This arc varies in width from 10 miles wide in the Cameron area to about 35 miles wide at Petrified Forest. The Little Colorado River cradles the southern edge and the tableland of Hopi Mesas and buttes make up the northern boundary.
The Petrified Forest is located off of Interstate 40 about 25 miles east of Holbrook, Arizona. Holbrook, Arizona |