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| Stretching the legs on a Spring stroll |
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| Up for a Spring snack but still a bit sleepy |
Female grizzly bears reach mating maturity at 4-5 years of age. They give birth to a single or up to four cubs (though usually just two) in January or February.
MUSINGS MEANT TO CAPTIVATE, EDUCATE AND INSPIRE
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| Stretching the legs on a Spring stroll |
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| Up for a Spring snack but still a bit sleepy |
They choose their permanent homes as larvae, sticking to hard substrates that will become their permanent homes for the rest of their lives.
It has taken us a long time to find how they actually stick or what kind of "glue" they were using.
Remarkably, the barnacle glue sticks to rocks in a similar way to how red cells bind together. Red blood cells bind and clot with a little help from some enzymes.
These work to create long protein fibres that first blind, clot then form a scab. The mechanism barnacles use, right down to the enzyme, is very similar. That's especially interesting as about a billion years separate our evolutionary path from theirs.
So, with the help of their clever enzymes, they can affix to most anything – ship hulls, rocks, and even the skin of whales. If you find them in tidepools, you begin to see their true nature as they open up, their delicate feathery finger-like projections flowing back and forth in the surf.
One of my earliest memories is of playing with them in the tidepools on the north end of Vancouver Island. It was here that I learned their many names. In the Kwak'wala language of the Pacific Northwest, the word for barnacles is k̕wit̕a̱'a — and if it is a very small barnacle it is called t̕sot̕soma — and the Kwak'wala word for glue is ḵ̕wa̱dayu.
We have known about this gem for a long while now. The fossil was discovered by hikers back in 1935 and later cast by the University of California palaeontologists in 1948.
The Dirty Thirties & The Great Depression
These were the Dirty Thirties and those living in Washington state were experiencing the Great Depression along with the rest of the country and the world. Franklin D. Roosevelt was President of the United States, navigating the States away from laissez-faire economics.
Charmingly, Roosevelt would have his good name honoured by this same park in April of 1946, a few years before researchers at Berkeley would rekindle interest in the site.
Both hiking and fossil collecting was a fine answer to these hard economic times and came with all the delights of discovery with no cost for natural entertainment. And so it was that two fossil enthusiast couples were out looking for petrified wood just south of Dry Falls on Blue Lake in Washington State.
While searching the pillow basalt, the Frieles and Peabodys came across a large hole high up in a cave that had the distinctive shape of an upside-down rhinoceros.
This fossil is interesting in all sorts of ways. First, we so rarely see fossils in igneous rocks. As you might suspect, both magma and lava are very hot. Magma, or molten rock, glows a bright red/orange as it simmers at a toasty 700 °C to 1300 °C (or 1300 °F to 2400 °F) beneath the Earth's surface.
A Rhinoceros Frozen in Lava
During the late Miocene and early Pliocene, repeated basaltic lava floods engulfed about 63,000 square miles of the Pacific Northwest over a period of ten to fifteen million years. After these repeated bathings the residual lava accumulated to more than 6,000 feet.
As magma pushes up to the surface becoming lava, it cools to a nice deep black. In the case of our rhino friend, this is how this unlikely fellow became a fossil. Instead of vaporizing his remains, the lava cooled relatively quickly preserving his outline as a trace fossil and remarkably, a few of his teeth, jaw and bones. The lava was eventually buried then waters from the Spokane Floods eroded enough of the overburden to reveal the remains once more.
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| Diceratherium tridactylum (Marsh, 1875) |
While there are likely many more, we have found fossil remains of Diceratherium, an extinct genus of rhinoceros, in the Miocene of Canada in Saskatchewan, China, France, Portugal, Switzerland, and multiple sites in the United States.
He has also been found in the Oligocene of Canada in Saskatchewan, and twenty-five localities in the United States — in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Washington and Wyoming.
Diceratherium was a scansorial insectivore with two horns and a fair bit of girth. He was a chunky fellow, weighing in at about one tonne (or 2,200 lbs). That is about the size of a baby Humpback Whale or a walrus.
Back in the Day: Washington State 15 Million-Years Ago
He roamed a much cooler Washington state some 15 million years ago. Ice dams blocked large waterways in the northern half of the state, creating reservoirs. Floodwaters scoured the eastern side of the state, leaving scablands we still see today. In what would become Idaho, volcanic eruptions pushed through the Snake River, the lava cooling instantly as it burst to the surface in a cloud of steam.
By then, the Cascades had arrived and we had yet to see the volcanic eruptions that would entomb whole forests up near Vantage in the Takama Canyon of Washington state.
Know Before You Go
You are welcome to go see his final resting site beside the lake but it is difficult to reach and comes with its own risks. Head to the north end of Blue Lake in Washington. Take a boat and search for openings in the cliff face. You will know you are in the right place if you see a white "R" a couple hundred feet up inside the cliff. Inside the cave, look for a cache left by those who've explored here before you. Once you find the cache, look straight up. That hole above you is the outline of the rhino.
If you don't relish the thought of basalt caving, you can visit a cast of the rhino at the Burke Museum in Seattle, Washington. They have a great museum and are pretty sporting as they have built the cast sturdy enough for folk to climb inside.
The Burke Museum
The Burke Museum recently underwent a rather massive facelift and has re-opened its doors to the public. You can now explore their collections in the New Burke, a 113,000 sq. ft. building at 4300 15th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105, United States. Or visit them virtually, at https://www.burkemuseum.org/
Photo: Robert Bruce Horsfall - https://archive.org/details/ahistorylandmam00scotgoog, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=12805514
Reference: Prothero, Donald R. (2005). The Evolution of North American Rhinoceroses. Cambridge University Press. p. 228. ISBN 9780521832403.
Reference: O. C. Marsh. 1875. Notice of new Tertiary mammals, IV. American Journal of Science 9(51):239-250
Lincoln, Roosevelt and Recovery from The Great Depression
Rural Tennessee has electricity for the same reason Southeast Alaska has totem parks. In order to help the nation recover from The Great Depression, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, created a number of federal agencies to put people to work. From 1938-1942 more than 200 Tlingit and Haida men carved totem poles and cleared land for the Civilian Conservation Corps in an effort to create “totem parks” the federal government hoped would draw travelers to Alaska.
This odd intersection of federal relief, Alaska Native art and marketing is the subject of Emily L. Moore’s book “Proud Raven, Panting Wolf: Carving Alaska’s New Deal Totem Parks.”
This effort to bring poles out of abandoned villages includes the Lincoln Pole being moved to Saxman Totem Park by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), who established the Saxman Totem Park in 1938.
The top carving on the Lincoln Pole bears a great likeness of Abraham Lincoln. According to the teachings of many Tlingit elders, this carving was meant to represent the first white man seen in Tlingit territory in the 18th century.
A century later, in the 1880s, one of my ancestors from the Gaanax.ádi Raven clan of the Tongass Tlingit commissioned the pole to commemorate our ancestor's pride to have seen this first white man—which has become a Gaanax.ádi crest—using a photograph of Abraham Lincoln as the model.
It is important not only for these various readings of the crests but also because it claims Gaanax.ádi clan territory before the first Europeans and budding Americans came to these shores—territory that Tlingit carvers who were re-carving the pole in the 1940s were trying to assert to the U.S. government as sovereign land.
Interestingly, another pole in that same park is the Dogfish Pole, carved for Chief Ebbits Andáa, Teikweidi, Valley House. The Chief Ebbits Memorial Pole—the Dogfish Kootéeyaa Pole—was raised in 1892 in Old Tongass Village in honour of a great man, Head Chief of the Tongass and my ancestor. It was then moved, re-carved and re-painted at Saxman Totem Park in 1938 as part of Roosevelt's program—and it due to be re-carved again this year.
It tells the story of his life and the curious way he became Ebbits as he was born Neokoots. He met and traded with some early American fur traders. One of those traders was a Mister Ebbits. The two became friends and sealed that friendship with the exchanging of names.
If you would like to read more about that pole and others, I recommend, The Wolf and the Raven, by anthropologist Viola Garfield and architect Linn Forrest (my talented cousin), published in 1961 and still in print as I ordered a copy for a friend just this year.
Life here is abundant, experimental, and just a little bit savage. This is a time when ecosystems are finding their rhythm, and the balance between predator and prey is being written in real time.
The waters teem with armoured placoderms, including the formidable Dunkleosteus—a one-ton, bone-plated apex predator with jaws powerful enough to shear through flesh and armour alike. Early sharks glide through the gloom, sleek and efficient, while lobe-finned and ray-finned fishes diversify into an astonishing array of forms, each carving out its niche in this crowded, competitive sea.
Down below, the seafloor is anything but quiet. Brachiopods carpet the substrate, while crinoids sway like living chandeliers in gentle currents. Coral reefs—built by tabulate and rugose corals—form bustling underwater cities, sheltering trilobites, early ammonoids, and a host of other invertebrates that thrive in these warm, shallow waters. It’s a feast… and everything is on the menu.
But something even more remarkable is unfolding at the edges of this watery world. In the shallows, a bold evolutionary experiment is underway.
The first tetrapods—our distant, four-limbed ancestors—begin their tentative push onto land. Alongside them, early terrestrial arthropods—wingless insects and the earliest arachnids—skitter across the damp margins, claiming new ground.
This episode dives into a pivotal chapter in Earth’s history—a time of innovation, adaptation, and relentless survival. From reef to open ocean to the very first footsteps on land, the Devonian is where the story of modern life truly begins.
If you'd like to listen to a podcast on our Devonian seas, check out the Fossil Huntress Podcast on your favourite stream or link to it at: https://open.spotify.com/show/1hH1wpDFFIlYC9ZW5uTYVL?si=9c3daa4c86cb4fda
Meet Paralejurus rehamnanus (Alberti, 1970), collected from the fossil-rich outcrops near Issoumour, Alnif, in Morocco, where the desert keeps a rather fine archive of ancient seas.
It was the glow of this specimen — that rich, burnished bronze — that first caught the eye of collector and increasingly talented macro photographer, David Appleton.
At first glance, one might suspect a bit of artistic licence in preparation. That golden sheen seems almost too lovely to be true. But lean in close — as David has — and the story shifts.
The colour runs through the fossil itself, threading into the surrounding matrix in delicate mineral veins. There are repairs, yes — quite normal for Moroccan trilobites — but the finish here is something rather special. Many specimens from this region carry that classic bronze-on-black palette, but seldom with such confidence.
And what a form it has.
Paralejurus is one of those trilobites that seems to understand aesthetics. Its body is long and gently oval, the exoskeleton arched like a well-made shield. The cephalon — its head — is a smooth, domed half-moon, elegant in its simplicity. Those large compound eyes, capped with crescent-shaped lids, are particularly fetching — you can almost imagine them catching the Devonian light.
Just behind the glabella, there’s a subtle transition — a quiet little occipital node — before the body gives way to that glowing thorax.Ten narrow segments make up this middle section, wrapped around a broad, raised axial lobe, or rhachis, giving the whole creature a pleasing sense of structure and strength.
At the rear, the pygidium is broad and beautifully fused — a smooth, unified shield. Unlike its cousins in the genus Scutellum, whose tail segments are etched with distinct furrows like icing on a well-decorated cake (and yes, that comparison may say more about me than the trilobite), Paralejurus opts for a more seamless design. It’s less pastry, more plate armour — efficient, protective, and rather Roman in its sensibility.
Along the sides, the axial regions rise gently, and from them radiate a series of fine furrows — twelve to fourteen delicate lines that complete the poetry of its form. It is, quite simply, a beautifully built animal.
Members of the genus Paralejurus lived from the Late Silurian into the Middle Devonian, wandering ancient seafloors across what is now Africa and Europe. They grew to about nine centimetres in length, though our bronzed friend here is a more modest 5.3 cm — compact, but no less charming.
Trilobites, of course, are among the earliest animals to sport hard skeletons, and they took full advantage of that evolutionary innovation.They flourished, diversified, and ruled the oceans for nearly 300 million years — from the Cambrian explosion through to their final curtain call at the end of the Permian, some 252 million years ago.
Now, all that remains are their mineralized echoes — these exquisite forms in stone — each one a small, perfect window into a vanished world.
And this one? A little bronze jewel from a Devonian sea, captured beautifully through David Appleton’s lens.
Some pieces stretch for meters, still tangled with small shells and bits of driftwood, while others hold tight, bulbous floats that once kept them buoyant in the underwater forests just offshore.
When the tide recedes, the air fills with the unmistakable scent of iodine and salt—an ancient perfume carried by the sea.
Kelp is a brown alga, part of the group Phaeophyceae, which evolved roughly 150 to 200 million years ago.
While kelp itself doesn’t fossilize easily (it’s soft-bodied and decomposes quickly), its ancient lineage can be traced through molecular and microfossil evidence. The earliest relatives of kelp likely appeared in the Jurassic seas, when dinosaurs ruled the land and the oceans teemed with ammonites.
Microscopic spores and chemical biomarkers in sedimentary rocks tell scientists that brown algae were already photosynthesizing in shallow coastal waters long before the first mammals appeared.
Giant kelp, Macrocystis pyrifera, holds the title for the fastest-growing marine organism on Earth—it can shoot up more than half a meter a day under ideal conditions!These towering underwater forests provide shelter and food for thousands of marine creatures, from tiny snails to sea otters, who wrap themselves in the fronds to sleep without drifting away.
Back when I used to scuba drive a lot around Vancouver Island, they were one of my favourite places to explore as those underwater forests were teeming with life.
If you’re beachcombing in British Columbia, Alaska, or California, you might find bull kelp, Nereocystis luetkeana, recognizable by its long, whip-like stipe and single round float. It’s edible and surprisingly tasty. The blades can be dried and used like seaweed chips, while the bulb can be sliced thin and pickled—an oceanic delicacy with a salty, citrusy crunch.
Other edible seaweeds you might encounter include sugar kelp, Saccharina latissima, which has a slightly sweet flavor, and ribbon kelp, Alaria marginata, often used in soups and salads.
On the foreshore near where I live on Vancouver Island, we have loads of sea lettuce. Sea lettuce, Ulva spp., is one of the ocean’s most vibrant and inviting greens—a delicate, translucent seaweed that looks like bright green tissue paper fluttering in the tide.
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| Sea Otter in a Kelp Bed |
Its thin, ruffled fronds are only a few cells thick, soft to the touch, and often cling to rocks, shells, or docks in intertidal zones where saltwater and freshwater mingle.
Unlike the giant brown kelps that form towering underwater forests, sea lettuce is part of the green algae group (Chlorophyta), sharing pigments more closely related to land plants.
It grows worldwide in temperate and tropical waters and thrives wherever nutrient-rich water flows—estuaries, tide pools, and shallow bays. When the tide goes out, you might see it draped over rocks like sheets of emerald silk, drying slightly in the sun and releasing a faint, oceanic scent.
Sea lettuce is entirely edible and a favourite among foragers and coastal chefs. Fresh from the sea, it has a mild, slightly salty flavour with a hint of sweetness—similar to spinach or nori. It can be eaten raw in salads, lightly fried until crisp, or dried into flakes and used as a natural salt substitute.
In many coastal cultures, from Ireland to Japan, Ulva has long been part of traditional cuisine. It’s also rich in vitamins A, C, and B12, along with iron and calcium—proof that sea greens can be as nutritious as they are beautiful. When my little sister was living in County Cork, she shared pictures of folk bathing in tubs of icy sea water and seaweed as a briny health spa treatment.
From a scientific perspective, sea lettuce plays an important ecological role. It provides shelter for small marine creatures like snails, shrimp, and juvenile fish, and it helps absorb excess nutrients from the water, which can help reduce harmful algal blooms.
However, when too many nutrients enter the ocean—often from agricultural runoff—sea lettuce can grow explosively, creating dense “green tides” that blanket shorelines.
Its lineage stretches deep into the fossil record as well. While soft-bodied algae like Ulva rarely fossilize, green algal relatives appear in rocks over 1.6 billion years old, making them some of Earth’s earliest photosynthesizers.
Beyond their culinary and ecological roles, kelp forests act as powerful carbon sinks, pulling CO₂ from the atmosphere and storing it in the deep ocean. They also buffer coastlines from storms and provide nurseries for fish populations that support global fisheries.
As you stroll the shoreline and your toes brush against that slippery tangle of golden-brown ribbons, remember—you’re touching the living descendant of an ancient lineage that’s been swaying in Earth’s oceans since the age of dinosaurs—beautiful, ancient and tasty!
If you had been standing in what is now the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico, you would not have had time to wonder.
A mountain-sized asteroid—roughly 10 to 12 kilometres across—tore through the atmosphere at extraordinary speed, brighter than the Sun and hotter than anything on Earth’s surface. In a heartbeat, it struck with a force equivalent to billions of nuclear bombs.
This was the Chicxulub impact.
The collision blasted a crater over 180 kilometres wide, vaporising rock, igniting forests, and sending a shockwave racing across continents. The sky itself seemed to fall. Molten debris—ejecta—was hurled high into the atmosphere before raining back down across the globe, each fragment glowing with the heat of re-entry. For a brief and terrible moment, much of the planet’s surface may have experienced searing temperatures, as if placed beneath a planetary broiler.
But the true devastation unfolded more slowly.
Fine particles—dust, ash, and sulphate aerosols—were lofted into the upper atmosphere, forming a thick veil that blocked sunlight. Photosynthesis faltered. Plants withered. Food webs, delicately balanced and deeply interconnected, began to collapse. The great non-avian dinosaurs, who had dominated Earth for over 160 million years, found themselves in a world that no longer supported them.
This was not a single bad day. It was the beginning of a prolonged ecological crisis.
We call this mass extinction event the Cretaceous–Paleogene, or K–Pg boundary. It marks the end of the Age of Dinosaurs and the dawn of a new world—one that would eventually be shaped by mammals, birds, and, much later, us.
The evidence for this catastrophic impact is written in stone.
All around the world, from Italy to Alberta, a thin layer of sediment marks this boundary. Within it lies an unusually high concentration of iridium, a rare element on Earth’s crust but common in asteroids. Shocked quartz—minerals fractured under immense pressure—and tiny glass spherules formed from vaporised rock tell the same story: something extraordinary happened here.
For decades, scientists debated alternative explanations. Volcanic activity, particularly the vast eruptions that formed the Deccan Traps in India, certainly played a role in altering the climate. These eruptions released enormous quantities of greenhouse gases and aerosols, stressing ecosystems long before the asteroid arrived.
But the consensus today is clear. The asteroid impact was the decisive blow—the coup de grâce in an already struggling world.
And yet, not everything perished.
Some creatures endured. Small mammals, tucked into burrows. Crocodilians, patient survivors of changing waters. Birds—the living descendants of theropod dinosaurs—weathered the storm and carried their lineage forward into the skies of a quieter, recovering world.
It is a humbling thought.
The forests returned. Life, as it always does, found a way to reassemble itself—different, reshaped, but resilient. The absence of the great dinosaurs opened ecological space, allowing mammals to diversify and, over millions of years, to evolve into forms both strange and familiar.
Including us.
So when we ask, “What killed the dinosaurs?” the answer is both simple and profound. A rock from space changed the course of life on Earth.
If you'd like to listen to stories like this on a podcast or stream them on video (sometimes only audio from my podcast and sometimes with visuals), head on over to www.fossilhuntress.com to link to YouTube or the Fossil Huntress Podcast.
Close your eyes and imagine the world as it once was: strange seas teeming with ammonites and trilobites, ichthyosaurs and mosasaurs, fern-filled forests echoing with the footsteps of dinosaurs, and sun-warmed badlands whispering secrets from ages long past.
Together, we’ll explore Earth’s great fossil treasures—places where time slows and stone remembers. From sacred landscapes to world-famous dig sites, each episode unearths the science and stories that connect us to all who have ever lived, swum, or flown across this incredible planet.
This is a podcast about discovery, deep history, and the wonder of life itself. I'll share what you want to bring with you to enjoy your time in the field and adventure stories from my time there.
From the tiniest single-celled ancestors to the mighty creatures that once ruled the Earth, you’ll hear how fossils tell the tale of change, resilience, and renewal—the discoveries that had me whoop with joy and the crushing defeat of a poorly split piece of shale.
So grab your curiosity, favourite the show, and come fossil-hunting through time with me—one ancient adventure at a time for some family-friendly fun.
Head on over to the Fossil Huntress Podcast on Spotify, Apple or your favourite streaming service. The latest episode answers the question, "What Killed the Dinosaurs?" Currently streaming in 116 countries.
Long before whales ruled the deep, these muscular, paddle-limbed lizards patrolled warm inland seas with the quiet confidence of creatures that knew very little could challenge them for long.
Picture a body built like a torpedo, jaws hinged like a bear trap, and teeth designed for the twin jobs of slicing and holding.
Some species stretched more than 15 metres in length—longer than a city bus—yet they moved through the water with the agility of an oversized crocodile on turbo mode.
With a powerful tail beating side to side, they could lunge forward in explosive bursts, swallowing ammonites whole or ambushing unsuspecting fish, turtles and even sharks. Yes—sharks were on the menu.
Scientifically, mosasaurs are a wonderful paradox. They were reptiles—close cousins of modern monitor lizards—but they evolved flippers, streamlined skulls and powerful tail flukes remarkably similar to those of whales and ichthyosaurs.
It’s convergent evolution at its flashiest: different lineages arriving at the same sleek design for life in the fast lane of the sea.
Their fossils tell a sweeping story of ancient oceans that once covered vast swaths of the planet. The chalk cliffs of Europe, the phosphate beds of Morocco and the great Western Interior Seaway of North America have all yielded the remains of these sea dragons. Each vertebra and jawbone is a relic of a vanished world where reptiles ruled the waves.
Along the rugged shores of Vancouver Island, mosasaurs left their mark as well. During the Late Cretaceous, much of what is now the island lay beneath a warm coastal sea.
The rocks of the Nanaimo Group—thick marine sandstones and shales laid down between roughly 90 and 66 million years ago—preserve tantalising traces of the predators that cruised this ancient Pacific margin.
Several mosasaur taxa have been reported from these deposits, including Tylosaurus, Mosasaurus, Plioplatecarpus, and Clidastes, animals that would have prowled these coastal waters alongside plesiosaurs, sharks and vast schools of fish.
These remains are often fragmentary—vertebrae, teeth, bits of jaw—but they speak clearly of formidable hunters moving through the same seas that deposited the coal beds and marine fossils of the Nanaimo Basin.
One of the most exciting discoveries came from the Comox Valley. In 1988, local fossil enthusiast Rick Ross discovered mosasaur remains near Dove Creek, just south of Courtenay on Vancouver Island.
The specimen, preserved in the marine rocks of the Nanaimo Group, included vertebrae and portions of the skeleton that confirmed the presence of these apex predators along our ancient coastline.
The Dove Creek mosasaur remains one of the most significant mosasaur finds on Vancouver Island and a wonderful reminder that our local rocks still hold secrets from the final chapters of the Age of Reptiles.
Imagine that Cretaceous shoreline for a moment: broad deltas feeding sediment into a shallow sea, ammonites drifting through the water column, and somewhere below the surface a mosasaur gliding silently past—sleek, powerful and very much in charge.
Their reign, however spectacular, was brief in geological terms. When the asteroid struck 66 million years ago, oceans darkened, food chains collapsed, and even these magnificent hunters could not outswim the global catastrophe that followed.
But in stone, they still roar. Their bones—sleek, predatory, impossibly elegant—remind us that the waters around Vancouver Island were once home to sea lizards the size of whales… and that the rocks beneath our feet are pages from an ocean epic still waiting to be read.
If you fancy listening to the story of the Dove Creek Mosasaur, check out the Fossil Huntress Podcast on your favourite listening stream. Tis an epic tale!
Science owes a great thank you to Rick Ross for his quick thinking and above-and-beyond action in saving that specimen!
#Mosasaurus #mosasaur #fossilhunting #paleontology #palaeontology
| Cannibalistic Comb Jellies |
Ctenophores or comb jellies are one of the phylogenetically most important and controversial metazoan groups.
Looks can be deceiving. At first glance you might think you are looking at a jellyfish but this is not the case. Surprisingly, they are not jellyfish and are not closely related, though they do share some characteristics with the gelatinous members of the subphylum Medusozoa.
Comb jellies are not picky eaters. Their tastes range to what is at hand, including cannibalizing other comb jellies. They will feast on their kin along with tasty plankton, zooplankton, crustaceans and wee fish.
Interest in their fossil record has been catalysed by spectacularly preserved soft-bodied specimens from Cambrian Lagerstätten of the 518-million-years-old Chengjiang Biota, the 505-million-years-old Burgess Shale and other Burgess Shale-like deposits.
We find them in the Late Devonian Escuminac Formation at Miguasha National Park, Quebec, Canada — a UNESCO world heritage site famous for its abundance of well-preserved vertebrate fossils including most major evolutionary groups of Devonian lower vertebrates from jawless fish to stem-tetrapods.
Based on morphological similarities of this Canadian fossil with stem-ctenophore fossils from the Cambrian Lagerstätte of the Chinese locality Chengjiang, they have been assessed for their affinity to stem-group ctenophores (dinomischids, Siphusauctum, scleroctenophorans) and early crown-group ctenophores. Modern ctenophores and many fossil forms lack mineralized hard parts, which renders the rare fossils that have been extracted from several Lagerstätten quite remarkable.
Like the soft bodies of jellyfish and the polyps of hydrozoans and anthozoans, the probability for such soft bodies (or body regions) to become fossilized is extremely low. In spite of this low preservation potential, remains of stem-ctenophores have become known from several Cambrian and younger conservation deposits, and with even older candidate ctenophores in the Ediacaran.
While Cambrian Lagerstätten have yielded several genera, ctenophore remains are much rarer in the Devonian; in particular, two studies, describing material from the German Hunsrück Slate.
| Bioluminescent Comb Jellies |
The most basal stem ctenophores are the dinomischids: sessile benthic petaloid invertebrates, many of which are equipped with a stalk. This group first was described from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale. Based on the genus Dinomischus, these early stalked forms were commonly called ‘dinomischids’.
Zhao et al. shared that dinomischids "form a grade in the lower part of the ctenophore stem group” and include taxa such as Xianguangia, Daihua, and Dinomischus that have hexaradiate-based symmetry (e.g., sixfold, 18-fold).
Some later, skeletonised stem-ctenophores were termed ‘Scleroctenophora’; ‘scleroctenophorans’ have a shorter stalk, lack the ‘petals’ and have no bracts and might be monophyletic.
To date, all known dinomischids and scleroctenophorans are Cambrian. Remarkably, analysis of the material described here suggests it is a very late-surviving member of this part of the ctenophore tree, occurring in strata over a hundred million years younger with no intervening known record, thus making it a Lazarus taxon with an extensive ghost lineage.
Palaeozoic sediments yield a growing number of fossil invertebrates with radial symmetries, some being quite enigmatic with body plans differing radically from those of extant organisms.
The morphological similarities to Cambrian forms and the mix of characters regarding overall shape and symmetries render this discovery important. The aims of this study are to describe the only known specimen of this Devonian ctenophore, discuss its phylogenetic and systematic position, and the impact of fossil data for ctenophore affinities, and assess its palaeoecological role.
Smilodon is a genus of the extinct machairodont subfamily of the felids. It is one of the most famous prehistoric mammals and the best known saber-toothed cat. Although commonly known as the saber-toothed tiger, it was not closely related to the tiger or other modern cats.
Up until a few years ago, all the great fossil specimens of this apex predator were found south of us in the United States. That was until some interesting bones from Medicine Hat, Alberta got a second look.
A few years ago, a fossil specimen caught the eye of researcher Ashley Reynolds as she was rummaging through the collections at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.
Back in the 1960s, University of Toronto palaeontologist C.S. Churcher and his team had collected and donated more than 1,200 specimens from their many field seasons scouring the bluffs of the South Saskatchewan River near Medicine Hat, Alberta.
Churcher is a delightful storyteller and a palaeontologist with a keen eye. I had the very great pleasure of listening to many of his talks out at the University of British Columbia and a few Vancouver Paleontological Society meetings in the mid-2000s.
"Rufus" was a thoroughly charming storyteller and shared many of his adventures from the field.
He moved out to the West Coast for his retirement, first to Gabriola Island then to Victoria, but his keen love of the science kept him giving talks to enthralled listeners keen to hear about his survey of the Dakhleh Oasis in the Western Desert of Egypt, geomorphology, stratigraphy, recent biology, Pleistocene and Holocene lithic cultures, insights learned from Neolithic Islamic pottery to Roman settlements.
The specimens he had collected had been roughly sorted but never examined in detail. Reynolds, who was researching the growth patterns and life histories of extinct cats saw a familiar-looking bone from an ancient cat's right front paw. That tiny paw bone had reached through time and was positively identified as Canada's first Smilodon.
These Apex Predators used their exceptionally long upper canine teeth to hunt large mammals.
Isotopes preserved in the bones of S. fatalis in the La Brea Tar Pits in California tell us that they liked to dine on bison (Bison antiquus) and camels (Camelops) along with deer and tapirs. Smilodon is thought to have killed its prey by holding it still with its forelimbs and biting it. And that was quite the bite!
Their razor-sharp incisors were arranged in an arch. Once they bit down, the teeth would hold their prey still and stabilize it while the canine bite was delivered — and what a bite that was. They could open their mouths a full 120 degrees.
Smilodon died out at the same time that most North and South American megafauna disappeared, about 10,000 years ago. Its reliance on large animals has been proposed as the cause of its extinction, along with climate change and competition with other species.
Sea anemones belong to the class Anthozoa, close kin to corals and jellyfish, and they’ve been holding their ground—quite literally—for a very long time.
Unlike their free-swimming cousins, anemones anchor themselves to rock, reef, or seafloor, letting the ocean bring dinner to them. Each delicate arm is lined with nematocysts—tiny harpoons loaded with venom—perfect for stunning passing prey.
But here’s where things get tricky for us fossil hunters…
Soft-bodied creatures like anemones don’t fossilize easily. No hard shell, no bones—just tissue and tide. So their story in the fossil record is a rare and precious one.
We find glimpses of them as far back as the Cambrian, over 500 million years ago, often preserved in exceptional deposits like the Burgess Shale of British Columbia, where soft-bodied life was captured in fine-grained sediments under just the right conditions.There, strange and beautiful anemone-like creatures hint at early anthozoan life, sharing space with the wonderfully weird cast of Cambrian seas.
Trace fossils—subtle impressions in ancient sea beds—also whisper of their presence. Circular resting marks and burrow-like structures suggest where anemones once anchored themselves, long after their bodies slipped away.
Its name, drawn from the Greek ankylo — bound or fused — and rhiza — root — hints at one of its more unusual traits: teeth with mostly single, fused roots.
A formidable grin, and not at all what we might expect from the dolphins we know today.
We often think of dolphins as gentle, clever denizens of the sea.
But cast your mind back to the Oligocene, and a rather different picture takes shape. Here was a hunter — swift, powerful, and armed with a mouthful of sharp teeth. Ankylorhiza tiedemani stood as the largest member of the Odontoceti — the great lineage of toothed whales that includes dolphins, porpoises, sperm whales, beaked whales, river dolphins, pilot whales, and their kin — all hunters of prey larger than plankton, all bearing teeth instead of baleen.
More clues surfaced in the decades that followed. Fragments in the 1970s and 1990s, and then something far more revealing — a nearly complete skeleton, now resting at the Mace Brown Museum of Natural History. A beautifully preserved skull, ribcage, much of the vertebral column, and even a solitary flipper.
Rare treasures, these, for creatures of the sea.
Together, they whisper a clearer story: a 4.8-metre predator, tracing its lineage back some 35–36 million years, diverging from baleen whales yet evolving strikingly similar features through convergence.
This was no languid swimmer. Some 24 million years ago, Ankylorhiza coursed through ancient seas with speed and purpose.
Its body tells the tale — a narrow tailstock, additional tail vertebrae, and a shortened humerus in its flippers. Like modern dolphins, it likely powered itself with strong, rhythmic thrusts of its flukes, adjusting its course with hydrofoil-like flippers.
Beneath the skin, robust muscles anchored to a relatively rigid torso — a design honed for movement, for pursuit, for the hunt.
The fossil record, however, does not always give up its secrets easily. Eocene whale skeletons show us the early transition from land to sea — limbs shrinking, bodies streamlining.But Oligocene specimens are rare, and with them, much of the story of how whales mastered fluke-powered swimming has remained elusive.
Did these early dolphins possess the same refinements for speed? For a long time, we could only speculate.
Then came the work of Robert Boessenecker and colleagues. Their study of this remarkable skeleton reveals an animal poised between worlds — its forelimb structure bridging stem cetaceans and modern whales, its spine showing the beginnings of rigidity at the tail while retaining flexibility through the lower back.
A body in transition, yet already capable.
And what a role it played. Its skull, teeth, vertebrae, and size all point to a macrophagous predator — one that hunted large prey and moved with relative speed.
In life, Ankylorhiza may well have filled a niche much like that of today’s killer whales — an apex hunter of its time, commanding the ancient seas with quiet authority.
A fossil, yes — but also a story. One of innovation, convergence, and the relentless shaping of life in motion.
| Hollardops sp. Devonian Trilobite |
The genus underwent reclassification in 1997 and emerged as Hollardops. We find this extinct arthropod in present-day Morocco. They share similarities with Greenops of New York and Canada but are generally larger than most Greenops species.
Hollardops have schizochroal eyes and a glabella that is slightly raised on the surface of the cephalon. Genal spines extend from the cephalon and extend to approximately the 6th thoracic segment.
Hollardops has eleven thoracic segments and also has five pairs of spines extending from the segments of the pygidium. Length ranges from approximately 3 to 9 cm.
Palaeo Coordinates — If you are a keen bean to head out in search of this lovely yourself, head to the Tazoulait Formation at Jbel (Jebel) Oufatène 30.8374368°N 4.9018067°W and Issimour 30.9669834°N 5.0373266°W SE of Alnif, western of Oued Alnif, Ma'ider region, Morocco.
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| Kourisodon puntledgensis |
These waters belonged to the mosasaurs—sleek, powerful marine reptiles that ruled the global oceans with quiet authority.
Since their first discovery in 1766, their bones have surfaced from nearly every corner of the world—New Zealand to Antarctica, Africa to Europe, the Americas to Japan—whispers of a dynasty that once circled the globe.
And yet, some of their most intriguing stories are written close to home.
Along the banks of the Puntledge River on Vancouver Island, a remarkable assemblage has come to light. Here, tucked into ancient marine sediments, we find the remains of both elasmosaurids and mosasaurs—echoes of a coastal ecosystem long vanished beneath forest and freshwater flow.
As Dan Bowen of the Vancouver Island Paleontological Society notes, this stretch of river has yielded not one, but multiple marine reptiles from a time when this land lay beneath a teeming inland sea.
The first mosasaur material recovered here—around ten vertebrae belonging to Platecarpus—was discovered by Tim O’Bear and carefully excavated by a dedicated team led by Dr. Rolf Ludvigsen. Later prepared by Bowen and Joe Morin, these bones offer a tantalising glimpse of fast-moving predators that once patrolled these waters.
But it is a second discovery that truly sharpens the tale.
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| Kourisodon photo by Roland Tanglao |
What emerged was Kourisodon puntledgensis—a name drawn from the Greek kourís and odon, meaning “razor tooth,” and an apt one at that.
Small by mosasaur standards—roughly 3.75 to 4.5 metres in length—Kourisodon was nonetheless a nimble and capable predator.
First described within the “Leiodontini” and now placed among the clidastines, it hunted with precision in Pacific waters rich with life. Alongside it swam long-necked elasmosaurids, turtles, and other mosasaurs, though notably absent were the polycotylids so common elsewhere.
What makes this animal especially intriguing is its story of place—and of connection.
The type specimen of Kourisodon puntledgensis comes from a single locality within the Santonian-aged Pender Formation along the Puntledge River—the very place that lends the species its name. And yet, across the vast Pacific, its relatives appear again in the Upper Cretaceous rocks of Japan’s Izumi Group.
There, fragmentary remains—including those of juveniles—hint at at least one additional, as-yet-unnamed species, distinguished by features such as longer maxillary teeth (Tanimoto, 2005; Caldwell & Konishi, 2007).
We see a similar trans-Pacific kinship echoed in the ammonites of these regions—shared lineages linking distant shores. But curiously, this connection does not extend inland. The marine reptiles of the Western Interior Seaway tell a different story entirely.
This is provinciality in action—ancient ecosystems shaped by geography, currents, and isolation. As detailed by Nicholls and Meckert (2002), the Pacific faunas of British Columbia evolved along their own path, distinct from their contemporaries to the east.
Today, a full-scale replica of Kourisodon puntledgensis—a sleek, 12-foot echo of those razor-toothed hunters—resides at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, Manitoba. A long way from the Puntledge, perhaps, but still tethered to that riverbank story.
And the Puntledge continues to give.
It is also the home of a newly described elasmosaur—Traskasaura—named in honour of Mike, Pat, and Heather Trask. Discovered in 1988 and formally described in 2025, it adds yet another layer to this rich and ever-unfolding story of Vancouver Island’s ancient seas.
Stand along the Puntledge now, with the river slipping quietly past your boots, and you can almost feel it—the weight of deep time, the flicker of ancient oceans, the swift shadow of something moving just beneath the surface.
And, if you’ve spent enough time in the field, you’ll feel something else too.
The memory of those who walked these shores with you—who swung their last hammer, shared their last laugh, and left their stories folded gently into the stones we still turn over today.
References
Nicholls, E. L. and Meckert, D. (2002). Marine reptiles from the Nanaimo Group (Upper Cretaceous) of Vancouver Island. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 39(11):1591–1603.
Tanimoto, M. (2005). Mosasaur remains from the Upper Cretaceous Izumi Group of Southwest Japan. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 84(3):373–378.
Caldwell, M., & Konishi, T. (2007). Taxonomic re-assignment of the first-known mosasaur specimen from Japan, and a discussion of circum-Pacific mosasaur paleobiogeography. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27(2):517–520.
CBC News (2018). “Ferocious” new mosasaur skeleton coming to Morden.
CJOB (2018). “Ferocious, razor-like teeth”: new mosasaur comes to Morden's fossil centre.
Winnipeg News (2018). Morden museum's collection of mosasaur skeletons grows with new addition.
Image Two: By Roland Tanglao from Vancouver, Canada - Dinos at Courtenay Museum -20090628-7Uploaded by FunkMonk, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10364342
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| Lobolytoceras costellatum |
Ammonites were predatory, squidlike creatures that lived inside coil-shaped shells.
Like other cephalopods, ammonites had sharp, beak-like jaws inside a ring of squid-like tentacles that extended from their shells. They used these tentacles to snare prey — plankton, vegetation, fish and crustaceans — similar to the way a squid or octopus hunt today.
Catching a fish with your hands is no easy feat, as I'm sure you know. Ammonites did the equivalent, catching prey in their tentacles. They were skilled and successful hunters. They caught their prey while swimming and floating in the water column.
Within their shells, they had a number of chambers, called septa, filled with gas or fluid that were interconnected by a wee air tube. By pushing air in or out, they were able to control their buoyancy in the water column.
They lived in the last chamber of their shells, continuously building new shell material as they grew. As each new chamber was added, the squid-like body of the ammonite would move down to occupy the final outside chamber.
They were a group of extinct marine mollusc animals in the subclass Ammonoidea of the class Cephalopoda. These molluscs, commonly referred to as ammonites, are more closely related to living coleoids — octopuses, squid, and cuttlefish) then they are to shelled nautiloids such as the living Nautilus species.
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| Lobolytoceras costellatum |
Ammonites first appeared about 240 million years ago, though they descended from straight-shelled cephalopods called bacrites that date back to the Devonian, about 415 million years ago, and the last species vanished in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.
They were prolific breeders that evolved rapidly. If you could cast a fishing line into our ancient seas, it is likely that you would hook an ammonite, not a fish.
They were prolific back in the day, living (and sometimes dying) in schools in oceans around the globe. We find ammonite fossils (and plenty of them) in sedimentary rock from all over the world.
In some cases, we find rock beds where we can see evidence of a new species that evolved, lived and died out in such a short time span that we can walk through time, following the course of evolution using ammonites as a window into the past.
For this reason, they make excellent index fossils. An index fossil is a species that allows us to link a particular rock formation, layered in time with a particular species or genus found there.
Generally, deeper is older, so we use the sedimentary layers rock to match up to specific geologic time periods, rather the way we use tree-rings to date trees. A handy way to compare fossils and date strata across the globe.
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| Barnacles All Closed Up |
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| Barnacle Cirri Seeking Tasty Plankton |
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| Barnacle Ancestry Goes Back to the Middle Cambrian |
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| Humpback Whale, Megaptera novaeangliae |