| Dinosaurs
Were Here
Imagine
a terrifyingly strange world where the only sounds are those made by
nature, with creatures so huge their movements make the ground shake, and
where in place of the Rocky Mountains, a flat, tropical plain meets an
inland ocean.
This is the Colorado of 150 million years ago, the age of the dinosaur,
the Jurassic Period made familiar to all by Michael Crichton. Hollywood is
at it again with the recent release of Disney Studio’s Dinosaur,
a feature-length film that brings the prehistoric age to life through
animation. Extinct for millions of years, the dinosaur has never been more
popular.
As
wonderful as today’s technology is at recreating the ancient past, it
still can’t beat the real thing. And that’s what we have in Colorado,
practically in CSM’s backyard.
A treasure-trove of fossilized dinosaur bones and footprints located along
the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains near Morrison, Colo., brings
thousands of students, scientists and tourists to the area each year to
see the prehistoric evidence for themselves.
Dinosaur Ridge, as the area was named in the 1980s, was discovered by CSM
geology professor Arthur Lakes in 1877 during a Sunday afternoon hike.
Lake’s fantastic discovery yielded the world’s first-discovered
stegosaurus and apatosaurus (also called brontosaurus) from the Jurassic
Period. At 33 tons, the apatosaurus was the first mega-dinosaur ever
uncovered, exciting paleontologists, geologists and archaeologists the
world over.
In 1930, when the Alameda Parkway was extended over the Dakota Hogback,
the site also yielded hundreds of dinosaur footprints from the Cretaceous
Period (100 million years ago). Where the Dakota Hogback now sits was once
the edge of an inland sea.
Dinosaurs lived and died along its shores and left evidence of their
existence in fossilized footprints embedded in rocks.
It is believed that the dinosaurs left their footprints in the sand
along the beach not long before a nearby now-extinct river flooded,
covering the impressions with silt. In addition to footprints, there is
evidence of roots from an ancient mangrove-like swamp.
For
many years after its discovery, the geologically world-famous site
remained unnamed, unmarked, yet easily accessible to all who were
interested.
For many, the temptation to collect fossils was too great and some even
went so far as to chip whole footprints from the rocks. In the mid-1980s,
a group of interested parties, including Bob Weimer, CSM professor
emeritus and Virginia Mast, CSM geology museum curator, founded Friends of
Dinosaur Ridge, whose mission is to preserve and protect the area that is
now designated a National Natural Landmark.
Ed Warren Geol E ’50, Hon Mem ’85
and Andy Taylor PhD
’74 joined the volunteer group a
few years later. Warren is currently president of Friends. Taylor is on
the board of directors.
“It’s
a labor of love,” says Warren about his and the other volunteers’
activities with the Friends.
Since its 1989 start-up,
the group’s assets have grown to just under $1 million with one
full-time paid director and 130 active volunteers. “Upwards of 100,000
people visit each year,” says Warren, predicting 200,000 to 300,000
visitors per year in the near future. “Last year we had 4,000 school
children in May alone.”
The most easily accessible parts of Dinosaur Ridge are located along the
Alameda Parkway that loops around the Dakota Hogback and are well marked
with 17 interpretive signs.
The more adventuresome can hike a two-mile trail over the Dakota Hogback.
About six times a year, the Alameda Parkway access is closed to traffic
and guides are stationed along the road to give visitors further insights.
A recently purchased bus—brightly painted with scenes from the
Cretaceous Period—takes visitors to the site from the visitors center
located at the northeast end of the ridge. Future plans include closing
the road to traffic permanently, says Warren. The ridge would then be
accessible only by bicycle, foot or bus.
The most remarkable sight along the Alameda Parkway is found at Stop 4 on
the east side of the ridge. “About one hundred million years ago, the
Rocky Mountains rose,
pushing the plains up to a 45-degree incline,” Warren explains.
Highway construction then exposed the face of those slanted rocks. What
the visitor sees at Stop 4 are tracks from Cretaceous dinosaurs, probably
ornithopods, an ostrich-like carnivore and theropods, an herbivore. Two
sets of theropod footprints—one large, one small—run side by side,
possibly that of mother and offspring.
The footprints, which are eroding, have been darkened so that they can be
more easily discerned. Solar panels illuminate the site at night. Three
hundred and six footprints have been mapped and measured so far.
In addition to erosion, Warren says, “Vandalism is our biggest
problem.” Fences have been erected around the footprints although
researchers, including some college students, are allowed to study the
area up close. Money raised by Friends of Dinosaur Ridge has gone toward
erecting numerous signs, building a podium for use by guides and
establishing and expanding the visitors center.
A former residence purchased by Jefferson County, on property that abuts
the ridge, serves as the visitors center and
includes office space and a gift shop with dinosaur-related merchandise
including plaster casts of footprints.
Future plans include building a new center, somewhat in the shape of a
stegosaurus, with spines atop the roof and a head protruding from the
front of the building. The stegosaurus is an appropriate symbol because
not only was it first discovered at Dinosaur Ridge, it has since been
named Colorado’s state fossil. The new center, when built, will be
noticeable from the C470 highway.
Dinosaur
Ridge has special programs throughout the year including Elderhostel
lectures (led by Warren) and summer science day camps for children 11-13
co-sponsored by CSM. In the spring, bus loads of school children also
visit to watch eagles, hawks and falcons migrating north overhead because
the ridge sits beneath a raptor migration corridor.
Preserving
Dinosaur Ridge is important for many reasons, says Warren. The site not
only gives visitors a unique and remarkable glimpse of the past, it is
both free and easily accessible. The thousands who visit can walk right up
to the rocks and feel the smoothness of embedded, fossilized dinosaur
bones from the Jurassic Period and marvel at how small their hands appear
resting inside gigantic footprints from the Cretaceous Period.
“Our focus is in keeping this world-famous
area from being destroyed,”
Warren says. “We’ll all be gone in time, but we want it to be here for
future generations.”
Maureen Keller
Mines Magazine
Spring 2000
Vol. 90 No. 2
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