somat 10 hours ago

I saw the Bone Quarry at Dinosaur national park a couple of years ago, And it was very nearly a religious experience.

I was on a cross country trip and decided to see it on a whim, so no real research on what it was, I thought it was going to be a large fossil, and went "I like dinosaurs, A fossil will be fun" But when I went around that last corner, entered the site. I was not prepared, the sight quite literally took my breath away.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/be/DNM_Quar...

Then when you learn that what you are seeing is only a quarter of what was found there... I am a little conflicted, on the one hand it is great that so many museums get near complete skeletons, get to share this great thing with so many people. But there is a good amount of regret. as majestic as what was preserved imagine if it were kept whole.

Final thoughts: Bone Quarry is a great name for a metal band.

kulahan 14 hours ago

> "More than half of the known dinosaur species in the world are described from a single specimen. We have thousands of Pachyrhinosaurus here."

This was fascinating to realize. I had no idea that our general experience was so spotty, but this also shows what an absolute gold mine this is.

  • mycatisblack 4 hours ago

    Come to think of it, our societies have a lot of mechanisms to ensure that human fossils will be close to non-existing. In my part of the world, bodies or even the smallest remains are retrieved. Even if it means dredging a lake. And when they dredge the lake they find a different body or clues to solve a decades-long disappearance mystery. What I’m getting at is that our bodies always end up in a wooden box or incinerated. Neither of which is conducive to fossilisation.

    I wonder if there could be a way to opt for “likely natural fossilisation” in your testament.