Dino-mite: Utah quarry gets explosive treatment
SALT LAKE CITY — Sometimes the delicate tools of dinosaur diggers just don’t cut it.
Thwarted since 2007 by layers of rock-hard sandstone, researchers at one of Dinosaur National Monument’s most important quarries turned to something more potent than brushes and hammers: explosives.
Crews set off a series of blasts earlier this month at a quarry known as DNM 16. It’s the same site that several years ago yielded a complete sauropod skull, one of the rarest finds in the dinosaur business.
Tantalized by that discovery and other less-complete skulls, researchers were determined to find out what else was hidden in the quarry.
The problem, though, is that the rock around the bones is so hard that workers had been unable to break through, even with use of a jackhammer, said Dan Chure, a paleontologist at the monument that straddles the Utah-Colorado border.
That’s why they sought out the blasting crew from Rocky Mountain National Park that typically uses explosives for work on trails, roads, utility lines and parking lots.
“There was no other way for us to get to these bones other than using these explosives,” he said.
The work was unusual but not unprecedented. A similar operation was conducted at a nearby fossil quarry about 12 years ago.
This time around, the blast team spent three days at the monument detonating handset explosive charges to clear away the sandstone. It was a delicate operation using enough explosive power to get the job done but not so much it would ruin the bones that paleontologists are after.
“It was three of us putting our heads together and calling on our best judgment so we didn’t screw anything up,” said Dave Larsen, who led the blasting project.
Over three days, the team dug about 40 bore holes to drop explosives inside. After the blasts, much of the material could be moved by hand.
Chure said he didn’t see any sign of damage to the dinosaur bones.
Digging at the site is expected to resume this spring.
The site isn’t far from Dinosaur’s Quarry Visitor Center east of Vernal, which houses the nation’s premier quarry of Jurassic-period dinosaur bones.
The lesser-known DNM 16 quarry was discovered in 1977 but intensive excavation didn’t start until decades later.
In 2005, researchers from Brigham Young University and the monument announced the discovery of the skull of a sauropod, a hulking plant-eating dinosaur with a relatively small head. The complete skull from the Lower Cretaceous period is the only known one in North America from the final 80 million years of dinosaurs’ reign.
Sauropods were a group of long-necked, long-tailed dinosaurs often considered the biggest beasts ever to walk on land.
Their bones aren’t particularly rare but, for reasons that mystify scientists, they hardly ever are found with their heads.
“It must be there’s some relatively loose connection between the skull and the neck,” Chure said. “There are lots of what we call ‘headless wonders.’”
The DNM 16 site has also yielded a complete and disarticulated skull, meaning that it’s in pieces, and parts of two other skulls.
“All the skulls we have belong to the same new species,” Chure said. “And to have multiple skulls like this, it’s almost unheard of; it’s mind-boggling.”
Hence the frustration as crews chasing more bones, including tails and limbs, ran headlong into impenetrable rock.
“It was just so labor-intensive to do it by hand,” said Carla Beasley, the monument’s chief of interpretation. “They were spending most of their time removing rock and not really getting to the good stuff.”
__
On the Net:
www.nps.gov/dino/
Related News
Researchers find evidence of dinosaur cannibalismOctober 7th, 2009 WASHINGTON - A researcher has found evidence dating back 70 million years to suggest that a dinosaur preyed on and ate other dinosaurs. The jawbone of what appears to be a Gorgosaurus was found in 1996 in southern Alberta.
70-million-year-old evidence of dinosaur cannibalism foundOctober 7th, 2009 WASHINGTON - A University of Alberta researcher has found 70 million year old evidence of dinosaur cannibalism. Phil Bell made the discovery.
Largest dinosaur footprints in Europe discoveredAugust 19th, 2009 LONDON - Scientists have found the largest dinosaur footprints ever to be discovered in Europe, which are discovered half way up a Swiss mountain. According to a report in the Telegraph, a team of paleontologists from the Natural History Museum in Basel found the prints at 3,300 metres on a mountain in Ela Nature Reserve, Switzerland's largest park.
Investigators: Blast at Ohio explosives plant that injured 10 caused by broken detonating cordJuly 31st, 2009 Officials: Broken cord caused blast at Ohio plantMcARTHUR, Ohio — Investigators say a blast that injured 10 workers at an explosives manufacturing plant in southeast Ohio was caused by a broken detonating cord. The explosion at Austin Powder Co.'s Red Diamond plant near McArthur on Tuesday blew off part of the roof and a wall.
8 workers injured in blast at southeast Ohio explosives plant where detonating cord is madeJuly 29th, 2009 At least 8 hurt in blast at Ohio explosives plantMcARTHUR, Ohio — An explosion at a southeast Ohio explosives manufacturing plant has injured at least eight workers. Austin Powder Co.
Police say 4 people injured in blast at southeast Ohio explosives plantJuly 28th, 2009 4 injured in blast at Ohio explosives plantMcARTHUR, Ohio — An explosion at a southeast Ohio explosives manufacturing plant has injured four workers. Austin Powder Co.
Signs of life: Mammal tracks from 190 million years ago found at Dinosaur National MonumentJuly 24th, 2009 Ancient mammal tracks found at national monumentSALT LAKE CITY — Hundreds of tiny footprints left by mammals some 190 million years ago have been found on a canyon wall in a remote part of Dinosaur National Monument, park officials said Thursday. The tracks are a rare find, mostly because they were left at a time when the area was a hostile, vast Sahara-like desert where towering sand dunes seldom preserved signs of animal life.
Two killed in Uttar Pradesh stone quarry blastJuly 7th, 2009 LUCKNOW - At least two people were killed and 10 injured after a blast in a stone quarry at an Uttar Pradesh village Tuesday, an official said here. The blast took place around 2 p.m.
Archaeologists uncover ancient stone quarry believed used in Second TempleJuly 6th, 2009 Israeli archaeologists discover ancient quarryJERUSALEM — Israeli archaeologists have uncovered an ancient quarry where they believe King Herod extracted stones for the construction of the Jewish Temple 2,000 years ago, the Israel Antiquities Authority said Monday. The archaeologists believe the 1,000-square-foot (100-square-meter) quarry was part of a much larger network of quarries used by Herod in the city.
New instrument can detect explosives up to range of 100 metersJuly 4th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Scientists have developed a new explosives detector with incredible sensitivity and a range of up to 100 meters that could save lives and thwart the efforts of terrorists. The detector, developed by a team of researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, is based on photo-induced acoustic spectroscopy (PIAS).
Three new Aussie dinos discoveredJuly 3rd, 2009 SYDNEY - In a new research, paleontologists have unveiled three new Australian dinosaur skeletons in outback Queensland, Australia. According to a report by ABC News, the two herbivores and one carnivore, excavated from the Winton formation, roamed our land during the Cretaceous period - 98 million years ago.
2,000-yr-old underground chamber in Israel may have been early Christian refugeJune 25th, 2009 WASHINGTON - New findings inside a 2,000-year-old underground chamber discovered in Israel's Jordan Valley suggest that it may have served as a monastery, hideout for persecuted Christians, or Roman army base. According to a report in National Geographic News, the largest human-made cave in Israel, the 1-acre (0.4-hectare) space is thought to have begun as a quarry.
Scientists claim discovery of largest carnivorous dino tooth in Spain till dateJune 23rd, 2009 WASHINGTON - A team of paleontologists has claimed to have discovered the largest carnivorous dinosaur tooth in Spain till date. The features and size of the 9.83cm tooth provide key information needed to identify its former owner.
Fossilized dino hand may help solve how bird wings evolved from dinosaur limbsJune 18th, 2009 WASHINGTON - In a new study, scientists have found the fossilized hand of a long-necked, ostrich-like dinosaur in China, which may help solve the mystery of how bird wings evolved from dinosaur limbs. According to a report in National geographic News, the ancient digits belonged to a 159-million-year-old theropod dinosaur dubbed Limusaurus inextricabilis.
Scientists uncover new bones at Utah dinosaur quarry in quest to piece together ancient lifeJune 5th, 2009 Scientists find more dinosaur bones at Utah quarrySALT LAKE CITY — Scientists at one of Utah's major new dinosaur quarries have found 60 to 70 new bones this spring, including what appears to be a 20-foot-long neck bone discovered this week. The latest finds are fresh evidence that the site near Hanksville could be a large and important source of bones in the coming years.