Home Articles Archaeology The World’s Largest Fossil Wilderness

The World’s Largest Fossil Wilderness

1188

An Illinois coal mine holds a snapshot of life on earth *300 million years ago, when a massive earthquake “froze” a swamp in time

Image may contain: one or more people, outdoor, nature and water

*Editors Note: I believe the fossilization happened at the time of the Great Flood about 2,345 BC. This is according to the author of Universal Model, Dean Sessions and his Sr. Scientific Researcher Rod Meldrum.

Map showing the location of the Galatia Channel 

World’s largest Fossilized Forest Is Near Galatia.

The largest fossil forest ever discovered lies beneath southern Illinois and the town of Galatia. Scientist say it is nearly 50 times as extensive as what was once considered the largest. Paleontologist, Howard Falcon Lang from the University of London, who explored the site said, “It is the closest thing to time travel.” Lang also commented, “Effectively what you have is a lost world.” Paleontologist William A. DiMichele of the Smithsonian Institute called it, “A botanical Pompeii, buried in an instant.” The petrified forest was discovered in the roof of multiple underground coal mines along what is known as the Galatia Channel, an ancient river that flowed across southern Illinois.
 
No photo description available.
Image may contain: plant and outdoor
 
Image may contain: outdoor and nature

The World’s Largest Fossil Wilderness

An Illinois coal mine holds a snapshot of life on earth 300 million years ago, when a massive earthquake “froze” a swamp in time

John Nelson and Scott Elrick inspect a mine shaft
The remains of a forest of lycopsids and other oddities is 230 feet underground (John Nelson, left, and Scott Elrick inspect a mine shaft ceiling rich in fossils.) (Layne Kennedy)
SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE 

Finding a fossil in a coal mine is no big deal. Coal deposits, after all, are petrified peat swamps, and peat is made from decaying plants, which leave their imprints in mud and clay as it hardens into shale stone.

But it was a different thing entirely when John Nelson and Scott Elrick, geologists with the Illinois State Geological Survey, examined the Riola and Vermilion Grove coal mines in eastern Illinois. Etched into ceilings of the mine shafts is the largest intact fossil forest ever seen—at least four square miles of tropical wilderness preserved 307 million years ago. That’s when an earthquake suddenly lowered the swamp 15 to 30 feet and mud and sand rushed in, covering everything with sediment and killing trees and other plants. “It must have happened in a matter of weeks,” says Elrick. “What we see here is the death of a peat swamp, a moment in geologic time frozen by an accident of nature.”

To see this little-known wonder, I joined Nelson and Elrick at the Vermilion Grove site, a working mine operated by St. Louis-based Peabody Energy and closed to the public. I donned a hard hat, a light, gloves and steel-toed boots. I received an oxygen bottle and a safety lecture. In case of emergency—poison gas, fire or an explosion—follow the red lights to find the way out of the mine, safety manager Mike Middlemas counseled. We could encounter “thick black smoke, and you won’t be able to see anything in front of you.” He said to use the lifeline running along the ceiling, a slender rope threaded through wooden cones, like floats in a swimming pool.

The fossil-rich coal seam is 230 feet below ground, and we rode there in an open-sided, Humvee-like diesel jitney known as a “man-trip.” The driver took us through four miles of bewildering twists and turns in tunnels illuminated only by escape beacons and the vehicle’s headlights. The journey took 30 minutes and ended in Area 5. The tunnels here are 6.5 feet high and about the width of a two-way suburban street.

The tunnels were silent and, lit by low-wattage bulbs, gloomy. Humid sum­mer air, drawn in from above, was chilly and clingy underground, where temperatures hover around 60 degrees Fahrenheit year-round. Miners are finished extracting coal here, and the sides of the tunnel have been sprayed with quicklime to suppress explosive coal dust. The shale roof—made of the sediment that destroyed the forest so long ago—is cracking and flaking off now that the coal below it has been removed. Wire mesh covers the ceiling to prevent big pieces from falling into the roadways or hitting miners.

Nelson picked his way along the tunnel, stepping around piles of broken stone and lumps of coal tumbled like black dice across the dusty floor. He stopped and looked upward. There, shining in the glow from his helmet light, is the forest—a riot of intertwined tree trunks, leaves, fern fronds and twigs silhouetted black-on-gray on the clammy shale surface of the tunnel roof. “I had seen fossils before, but nothing like this,” he says.

Nelson, who is now retired, first visited the Riola-Vermilion Grove site during a routine inspection shortly after the mine opened in 1998. He spotted fossils but didn’t pay much attention to them. He saw more fossils when he inspected different tunnels the next year, and still more the year after that. Elrick joined him in 2005, and by then the fossils added up to “too many,” Elrick says. “Something odd was going on.”

Nelson called in two paleobotanists, William DiMichele, of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, and Howard Falcon-Lang, of Britain’s University of Bristol, to view the site. Falcon-Lang describes it as “a spectacular discovery” because the whole forest—not just individual trees or plants—is intact on the ceiling. Most ancient peat forests die gradually, leaving only spotty evidence of what grew there. Because this one was buried all at once, almost everything that was there is still there. “We can look at the trees and the surrounding vegetation and try to understand the whole forest,” says DiMichele.The lords of this jungle were the lycopsids: scaly plants with trunks up to 6 feet in circumference that grew up to 120 feet in height and bore spore-producing cones. They looked like giant asparagus spears. In the pale light of the tunnel, 30-foot fossil traces of lycopsid gleam slickly in the shale roof like alligator skins.

Next to the lycopsids are calamites—30-foot-tall cousins of the modern-day horsetail—and ancient, mangrove-size conifers known as cordaites. Seed ferns (which are unrelated to modern ferns) grew 25 feet tall. Tree ferns grew 30 feet, with crowns of large, feathery fronds.

Few animal fossils have been found in the mine—chemicals in the ancient swamp’s water may have dissolved shells and bones—but other sites from more than 300 million years ago, a period known as the Carboniferous, have yielded fossils of millipedes, spiders, cockroaches and amphibians. Monster dragonflies with 2.5-foot wingspans ruled the skies. (It would be another 70 million years before the first dinosaurs.)

And then the earthquake struck, and this swampy rain forest was gone.

One of the reasons the site is so valuable to scientists is that it opens a window on the natural world just prior to a period of great, and puzzling, change. For several hundred thousand years after this rain forest was entombed, tree ferns, lycopsids and other plants competed for dominance—”a kind of vegetational chaos,” says DiMichele. For some unknown reason, the tree ferns prevailed, he says, and eventually took over the world’s tropical wetland forests.Two-thirds of the species found in Riola-Vermilion Grove would vanish. The mighty lycopsids virtually disappeared.

Researchers offer several possible reasons for the great makeover in plant communities around 306 million years ago: precipitous changes in global temperatures; drying in the tropics; or, perhaps, tectonic upheaval that eroded even older coal deposits, exposing carbon that then turned into carbon dioxide. Whatever the reason, earth’s atmosphere suddenly acquired a lot more carbon dioxide. Determining the relationship between this ancient atmospheric change and the changes in vegetation could offer clues about how today’s ecosystem will react to carbon dioxide increases caused by the burning of fossil fuels.

The Riola-Vermilion Grove team, DiMichele says, is using the fossil forest as a reference point. The researchers are analyzing the chemical makeup of earlier and later coal deposits for measures of ancient carbon dioxide, temperature, rainfall and other variables. So far, the rise in carbon dioxide seems to be fairly smooth over time, but the change in vegetation is jerkier.

Comparing fossils from before 306 million years ago and after, “you have a total regime change without much warning,” says DiMichele. “We need to look much more closely at the past,” he adds. “And this is our first opportunity to see it all.”

Guy Gugliotta has written about cheetahs and human migrations for Smithsonian.

Bob Wright of the Flood Museum and Rod Meldrum

I heard the information that Bob Wright shared about these fossil’s and knew you would enjoy it. Bob speaks about the “The World’s Largest Fossil Wilderness” in this video #46 at about 22 minutes in.

See all of Rod Meldrum’s 2020 Come Follow Me Podcast’s here

About the Bob Wright’s Museum in Nauvoo

Since the time we were little children, we have heard the story of Noah and the Ark.  We loved hearing of the great flood, and in particular about all the animals coming to Noah in pairs.  Perhaps our fascination is that part of little children that loves animals, and water.  We also love rainbows.  This story has all the makings of a Grimm Fairy Tale.  The seemingly innocuous story, with its beautiful images, and pretty pictures, yet somehow belying the dread and sorrow hiding just beneath the surface.  While this may be perfectly fine for a children’s fable, it does great injustice to a story as compelling and insightful as the story of Noah, and the great deluge, and the promise.

The most significant difference, is hopefully the most obvious: this story is true.  As we will see in chapters to come, the epic tale of Noah and his splendid ark did in fact happen.  More importantly, the message it conveys to us is every bit as important today as it was to a persecuted prophet thousands of years ago.

In Genesis, the Lord says; “This is the token of the covenant which I make between me and you, and every living creature that is with you, for perpetual generations: I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant between me and the earth.”[1]

Isn’t it interesting that the Lord is specific in his granting this covenant to “perpetual generations”?  This sign was not just given for Noah, or those with him, or even those who knew him, but for everyone, even in the furthest reaches of time.  It is a sign for us.  It is a story for us.

But, how much of your time is consumed with worrying about a flood?  I happen to live along the Mississippi River, and there are times when I do worry about a flood.  It might inconvenience me, it might cause my basement to flood, it might even prevent me from getting where I want to go if roads are washed out.  But, I do not worry that it will cover my house, or that it will cause me or my loved ones to be in danger, and I certainly do not worry that it will cover the earth.  So, this promise seems a little foreign to me.  Does it to you?

There are other floods I do worry about. Psalms 18:4 says “The sorrows of death compassed me, and the floods of ungodly men made me afraid.”  Psalms 69:2 reads: “I sink in deep mire, where there is no standing’ I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me.”  I can relate to these floods, they are very real to me.  They trouble me, and those I love.

The Savior himself made reference to these spiritual floods in Luke 6:48 when he spoke about the man building his house upon the rock: “He is like a man which built an house, and digged deep, and laid the foundation on a rock: and when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently upon that house, and could not shake it: for it was founded upon a rock.”

The promise of the bow then, is also a reminder to us that the Lord has promised us, that by keeping his commandments, by being obedient, by building our house upon the rock, he will remember his promise and never allow us to perish.

The story of the bow is important because it is our story.  The bow is a promise made to us and our families.  We must understand it to take advantage of this amazing covenant.

And once we understand it, we must stand for it. In a world intent on drowning out a still, small voice with a cacophony of misinformation and misrepresentation, we are warned to remember, to stand, and to defend.

While others may be encouraged by evil forces to adopt the bow as a symbol of their own choices, we can be the guardians. As you will see, it is not simply a beautiful, colorful symbol, it is a token. A token of something important and valuable.

[1] Genesis 9:12-13