Here's the excavated pit after the pedestal popped out.
Because the fossil-bearing pedestal had already popped off, we had to place the pedestal on a mound of sand to jacket it.
Chris takes burlap strips back to the excavation. I quite like this photo.
Chris takes burlap strips back to the excavation. I quite like this photo.
Just before we started the jacketing process. You can see in the background where the hole is, and that just a small sliver of the former 'fairweather' beach was left to stand on in order to reach the fossil. Within a few days, this was all gone. The sand surface you see there (where the red jacket is laying) is the higher surface of the beach from over the summer - just a small remnant of it remains. After this sliver is gone, the fossil would have been many feet out of reach above the beach.
A beautiful sunset (and advancing rainclouds) heralded our completion of the excavation.
The odontocete skull is halfway jacketed, and as the temperature begins to drop, our hands were beginning to go numb.
Chris cuts more burlap strips for the second half of the jacket.
A beautiful sunset (and advancing rainclouds) heralded our completion of the excavation.
The odontocete skull is halfway jacketed, and as the temperature begins to drop, our hands were beginning to go numb.
Chris cuts more burlap strips for the second half of the jacket.
1 comment:
Naw, I'm not complaining - there are certain aspects of coastal fieldwork that are unusual and hazardous, and sometimes just kind of a real drag (i.e. tides and the access limits they pose).
The combination of the scenery and the fossils makes it totally worth it, though.
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