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Title: Texas Fossils: An Amateur Collector's Handbook

Author: William Henry Matthews

Release date: January 5, 2018 [eBook #56315]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, MFR and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TEXAS FOSSILS: AN AMATEUR COLLECTOR'S HANDBOOK ***

BUREAU OF ECONOMIC GEOLOGY
The University of Texas at Austin
Austin, Texas 78712
John T. Lonsdale, Director


Guidebook 2


TEXAS FOSSILS:
An Amateur Collector’s Handbook

By
William H. Matthews III

SEAL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS

November 1960
Second Printing, July 1963
Third Printing, August 1967
Fourth Printing, June 1971
Fifth Printing, November 1973
Sixth Printing, April 1976
Seventh Printing, November 1978
Eighth Printing, September 1981
Ninth Printing, August 1984

Contents

Page
Introduction 1
What are fossils? 3
The study of fossils 4
Paleobotany 4
Invertebrate paleontology 4
Vertebrate paleontology 4
Micropaleontology 4
Preservation of fossils 5
Requirements of fossilization 5
Missing pages in the record 5
Different kinds of fossil preservation 7
Original soft parts of organisms 7
Original hard parts of organisms 7
Calcareous remains 10
Phosphatic remains 10
Siliceous remains 10
Chitinous remains 10
Altered hard parts of organisms 10
Carbonization 10
Petrifaction or permineralization 10
Replacement or mineralization 10
Replacement by calcareous material 11
Replacement by siliceous material 11
Replacement by iron compounds 11
Traces of organisms 11
Molds and casts 11
Tracks, trails, and burrows 14
Coprolites 14
Gastroliths 14
Pseudofossils 14
Dendrites 14
Slickensides 16
Concretions 16
Where and how to collect fossils 17
Collecting equipment 17
Where to look 19
How to collect 20
Cleaning and preparation of fossils 21
How fossils are named 21
The science of classification 21
The units of classification 22
Identification of fossils 23
Use of identification keys 23
Identification key to main types of invertebrate fossils 26
List of Texas colleges offering geology courses 27
Cataloging the collection 31
How fossils are used 31
Geologic history 33
Geologic column and time scale 33
The geology of Texas 34
Physiography 35
Trans-Pecos region 35
Texas Plains 35
High Plains 35
North-central Plains 37
Edwards Plateau 37
Grand Prairie 37
Llano uplift 37
Gulf Coastal Plain 37
Geology 37
Precambrian rocks 40
Paleozoic rocks 40
Cambrian 40
Ordovician 40
Silurian 40
Devonian 40
Mississippian 41
Pennsylvanian 41
Permian 41
Mesozoic rocks 42
Triassic 42
Jurassic 42
Cretaceous 42
Cenozoic rocks 43
Tertiary 43
Quaternary 43
Main types of fossils 44
Plant fossils 44
Classification of the plant kingdom 44
Division Thallophyta 44
Division Bryophyta 44
Division Tracheophyta 44
Animal fossils 48
Phylum Protozoa 48
Class Sarcodina 48
Order Foraminifera 48
Order Radiolaria 48
Phylum Porifera 49
Phylum Coelenterata 49
Class Anthozoa 49
Subclass Zoantharia 50
Order Rugosa 50
Order Scleractinia 50
Order Tabulata 50
Phylum Bryozoa 50
Phylum Brachiopoda 54
Class Inarticulata 54
Class Articulata 56
Phylum Mollusca 56
Class Gastropoda 59
Class Pelecypoda 59
Class Cephalopoda 66
Subclass Nautiloidea 66
Subclass Ammonoidea 75
Subclass Coleoidea 78
Order Belemnoidea 78
Phylum Annelida 78
Phylum Arthropoda 78
Subphylum Trilobitomorpha 78
Class Trilobita 78
Subphylum Crustacea 80
Class Ostracoda 80
Phylum Echinodermata 80
Subphylum Pelmatozoa 81
Class Cystoidea 81
Class Blastoidea 81
Class Crinoidea 81
Subphylum Eleutherozoa 82
Class Asterozoa 82
Subclass Asteroidea 82
Subclass Ophiuroidea 82
Class Echinozoa 82
Subclass Echinoidea 82
Subclass Holothuroidea 85
Phylum Chordata 85
Subphylum Hemichordata 85
Class Graptolithina 85
Subphylum Vertebrata 86
Superclass Pisces 87
Class Agnatha 87
Class Placodermi 87
Class Chondrichthyes 87
Class Osteichthyes 87
Superclass Tetrapoda 89
Class Amphibia 89
Class Reptilia 89
Cotylosaurs 89
Turtles 89
Pelycosaurs 89
Therapsids 89
Ichthyosaurs 95
Mosasaurs 95
Plesiosaurs 95
Phytosaurs 95
Crocodiles and alligators 95
Pterosaurs 95
Dinosaurs 95
Order Saurischia 97
Suborder Theropoda 97
Suborder Sauropoda 97
Order Ornithischia 97
Suborder Ornithopoda 97
Suborder Stegosauria 97
Suborder Ankylosauria 97
Suborder Ceratopsia 100
Class Aves 100
Class Mammalia 100
Subclass Allotheria 100
Subclass Theria 100
Order Edentata 100
Order Carnivora 102
Order Pantodonta 102
Order Dinocerata 102
Order Proboscidea 102
Order Perissodactyla 104
Horses 104
Titanotheres 104
Chalicotheres 106
Rhinoceroses 106
Order Artiodactyla 106
Entelodonts 106
Camels 106
Books about fossils 108
General works 108
Nontechnical and juvenile 108
Collecting helps 108
Reference works 109
Selected references on Texas fossils 109
Glossary 111
Index 115

Illustrations

Figures Page
1. Sketch of a coprolite—fossilized animal excrement 14
2. Sketch of a gastrolith—the gizzard stone of an ancient reptile 14
3. Dendrites—a typical pseudofossil 14
4. Types of symmetry in a fossil coral 24
5. Bilateral symmetry in fossil brachiopod 24
6. A brachiopod showing specimen number and accompanying label 31
7. Two types of micropaleontological slides 32
8. Typical Pennsylvanian crinoidal limestone 41
9. Typical Texas Foraminifera 49
10. Typical radiolarians 49
11. Morphology and principal parts of corals 50
12. Two types of bryozoans 50
13. Morphology and principal parts of articulate brachiopods 54
14. Lingula, a typical inarticulate brachiopod 56
15. Kingena wacoensis, a common Cretaceous brachiopod 56
16. Morphology and principal parts of gastropod shells 60
17. Morphology and principal parts of a typical pelecypod shell 65
18. Morphology and principal parts of the pearly nautilus 75
19. Characteristic features of the various types of cephalopod sutures 75
20. Types of typical fossil annelid worms 78
21. Morphology and principal parts of trilobites 80
22. Two extinct attached echinoderms, Pentremites and Caryocrinites 81
23. Typical modern crinoid, or “sea lily,” showing principal parts 81
24. Graptolites 86
25. Sketches of mastodon and mammoth teeth 104
26. Two views of a typical fossil horse tooth 104
Plates Page
1. Geologic time scale Frontispiece
2. Types of fossil preservation 8
3. Silicified brachiopods dissolved from Permian limestones of the Glass Mountains, Brewster County, Texas 12
4. Dinosaur tracks in limestone in bed of Paluxy Creek near Glen Rose, Somervell County, Texas 15
5. Fossil collecting equipment 18
6-8. Fossil identification charts 28-30
9. Physiographic map of Texas 36
10. Geologic map of Texas 38-39
11. Geologic range of the major groups of plants and animals 45
12. Fossil plants—thallophytes and tracheophytes 46
13. Fossil plants—tracheophytes 47
14. Paleozoic sponges and sponge spicules 51
15. Pennsylvanian corals 52
16. Cretaceous and Tertiary corals 53
17. Pennsylvanian bryozoans and Cambrian and Mississippian brachiopods 55
18, 19. Pennsylvanian brachiopods 57, 58
20. Pennsylvanian gastropods 61
21. Pennsylvanian and Cretaceous gastropods 62
22, 23. Tertiary gastropods 63, 64
24. Pennsylvanian pelecypods 67
25-28. Cretaceous pelecypods 68-71
29-31. Tertiary pelecypods 72-74
32. Pennsylvanian and Cretaceous cephalopods 76
33. Cretaceous cephalopods 77
34. Fossil arthropods 79
35. Fossil starfishes, crinoids, and holothurian sclerites 83
36. Cretaceous echinoids 84
37. Primitive armored fish, shark teeth, and conodonts 88
38. Comparison of the dinosaurs 90
39. Comparison of Mesozoic flying and swimming reptiles 91
40. Pelycosaur, cotylosaur, and a primitive amphibian 92
41. Swimming reptiles 93
42. Phytosaur and flying dinosaurs 94
43. Skull of Phobosuchus, from Cretaceous of Trans-Pecos Texas 96
44. Saurischian dinosaurs 98
45. Ornithischian dinosaurs 99
46, 47. Cenozoic mammals 101, 103
48. Tertiary mammals 105
49. Cenozoic mammals 107

Plate 1
GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE

ERA
PERIOD
EPOCH
CHARACTERISTIC LIFE
CENOZOIC “Recent Life”
QUATERNARY 1 MILLION YEARS
Recent
Pleistocene
TERTIARY 64 MILLION YEARS
Pliocene
Miocene
Oligocene
Eocene
Paleocene
MESOZOIC “Middle Life”
CRETACEOUS 70 MILLION YEARS
JURASSIC 45 MILLION YEARS
TRIASSIC 50 MILLION YEARS
PALEOZOIC “Ancient Life”
PERMIAN 55 MILLION YEARS
CARBONIFEROUS
PENNSYLVANIAN 30 MILLION YEARS
MISSISSIPPIAN 35 MILLION YEARS
DEVONIAN 55 MILLION YEARS
SILURIAN 20 MILLION YEARS
ORDOVICIAN 75 MILLION YEARS
CAMBRIAN 100 MILLION YEARS
PRECAMBRIAN ERAS
PROTEROZOIC ERA
ARCHEOZOIC ERA
APPROXIMATE AGE OF THE EARTH MORE THAN 3 BILLION 300 MILLION YEARS

Texas Fossils
An Amateur Collector’s Handbook

William H. Matthews III[1]

INTRODUCTION

Almost everyone has seen the fossilized remains of prehistoric plants or animals. These might have been the skeleton of a gigantic dinosaur, the petrified trunk of an ancient tree, or the shells of snails or oysters that lived in the great seas that covered Texas millions of years ago.

Each year more and more people are learning that these fossils are more than mere curiosities. Instead, they are realizing that a good collection of fossils provides much information about the early history of our earth, and that fossil collecting can be a most enjoyable, fascinating, and rewarding hobby. It is for these people that Texas Fossils was written.

This publication is primarily an amateur collector’s handbook and as such offers many suggestions and aids to those who would pursue the hobby of fossil collecting. It tells, for example, what fossils are, where and how to collect them, and how they are used. Suggestions are made as to how the specimens may be identified and catalogued, and there are discussions and illustrations of the main types of plant and animal fossils. Included also is a simplified geologic map of Texas and a brief review of the geology of the State.

Texas Fossils is not a comprehensive study of the paleontology of Texas. Rather, it deals primarily with the more common species that the average collector is likely to find. These fossils are illustrated in the plates and figures, and these illustrations should be of some help in identifying the specimens in one’s collection. Included for completeness, however, are sketches and descriptions of some of the more rare and unusual fossils, and, for general interest, there are illustrations and descriptions of many of the extinct reptiles and mammals that once inhabited this State.

In addition, a group of selected references has been included for the reader who wishes to know more about earth history and paleontology. Many of these publications provide references of a more technical nature for the more advanced or serious collector, and some of them list excellent collecting localities.

A minimum of technical terminology has been used, but terms not commonly found in dictionaries, or which have not been explained in the text, are defined in the glossary (pp. 111-114).

Many people have helped in the planning, preparation, and completion of Texas Fossils, and their help is gratefully acknowledged: Dr. Keith Young, The University of Texas; Dr. Harold Beaver, Baylor University; and Professor Jack Boon, Arlington State College, offered helpful suggestions and information on Cretaceous fossils; Professors Richmond L. Bronaugh, Baylor University, and Jack T. Hughes, West Texas State College, provided information on vertebrate collecting localities; Professor Fred Smith, Texas A&M College, supplied data on Tertiary collecting localities and fossils which were used in illustrations; Dr. Saul Aronow and Professor Darrell Davis, Lamar State College of Technology; Dr. Jules DuBar, University of Houston; and Dr. Samuel P. Ellison, The University of Texas, made valuable suggestions which have been incorporated into the manuscript.

Special thanks are due Drs. John T. Lonsdale, L. F. Brown, Jr., and Peter U. Rodda, Bureau of Economic Geology, who critically read the manuscript and contributed greatly to the presentation of the material; Dr. John A. Wilson, The University of Texas, who read the section on vertebrate fossils and made invaluable suggestions and criticisms; Miss Josephine Casey, who edited the manuscript; and Mr. J. W. Macon, who prepared the maps and charts.

Thanks are due also to Dr. G. A. Cooper, United States National Museum, who prepared Plate 3 especially for this publication, and to R. T. Bird and the American Museum of Natural History for photographs used in Plates 4 and 43. Plates 38 and 39 were provided through the courtesy of Dr. J. W. Dixon, Jr., and the Geology Department of Baylor University. The other photographs were prepared by the writer. To Sarah Louise Wilson, Lamar State College of Technology, the writer gratefully acknowledges her tireless and painstaking efforts in preparing the many fine drawings which make up the balance of the illustrations.