Sunday, September 27, 2009

Australia


Sunrise in Adelaide



Nilpena Station: the Shearers' Quarters



Moonrise over the Smithy



My field locality: Tennis Courts



Bed 4: "Mop Bed," bespattered with mop-identifying post-its



Excavation at West Tennis Courts



Jim testing out the furniture masons' wares



Dust Storm!



Sunset in the dust storm



Emmy, stylin' her most recently acquired item of high fashion ("rescued" from the Leigh Creek park)



Double rainbow!



The Cairns rainforest: Kookaburra sits in the old gum tree...



Cairns, viewed en route to the Great Barrier Reef!


On July 2, 2009, the Australian Expedition – Mary, Lidya, R.J., Emmy, Ian, Mary Elizabeth, Matt and D.A. magically condensed their luggage and set off. Although R.J. (and more importantly, his precious burden of laminated photographs) was stopped at security on the suspicious charge of having a watch in his backpack rather than on his wrist and, alas, no one discovered a stuffed isopod during the post-deplaning tidying session, we successfully made it through two flights, SUV and trailer rental and a treacherous system of roundabouts, full of cars driving the wrong way, to arrive two days later at the Princes Lodge, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. Our respite was brief, however, and soon we were racing through the most super of Adelaide’s supermarkets, maniacally snatching goods off shelves and dazedly consulting shopping lists.

The next day we embarked on the six-hour drive to Nilpena Station, pushing to arrive before dark (in order to avoid the crepuscular kangaroos – the Australian equivalent of hitting a moose or cow). Through Port Pirie, Port Augusta, Hawker and at last the Flinders, we sped on and arrived with the last of the light. After hauling bag after bag of groceries into the tiny Shearers’ Quarters (Nilpena is a traditional sheep ranch), we finally organized and stuffed into place the last of the cans, greens, dairy, bread, dozens of bottles of wine and massive pile of GORP ingredients and collapsed into bed, only to awaken in a couple hours, as the jet lag caught up with us and vindictively pounced.


We spent our days outside in the elements – ranging from three-layer (“mild”) to six-layer (“uncontrollable trembling” – especially when the wind howled) weather. A couple times, mulish blankets of thick clouds or startling downpours drove us out of the field and into Leigh Creek to resupply and descend upon the bewildered owners of the small-town post office with sheaves of postcards. But otherwise, battling the dust storms and the bitterly-cold winds, cursing the faux sun and working frantically during the few brilliant, cloudless days, we excavated, scrubbed, picked, gridded, mapped, measured, latexed, drew, photographed, prospected amongst the float and endlessly observed the panoply of the Ediacara Biota. At dusk each day we returned to (of course) gin and tonics and a very welcome hot dinner, courtesy of D.A., downloaded each day’s worth of photographs (I accumulated nearly 5 Gb of mop-related photographs by the end of the trip) and sometimes watched movies on the South Australia Museum’s big screen, with Mary’s projector – classics like Mama Mia and Short Circuit (“I am standing here beside myself”). We tasted quandong milkshakes, celebrated Ian’s birthday and the carnivores sampled the Parachilna Hotel’s “Feral Platter” – emu pate, camel sausage and other similar delicacies.


Time passed quickly, and soon we were racing to tie up all the loose ends in our fieldwork, give the house a thorough beating to (very temporarily) free it from its thick coat of red dust (I easily reached my lifetime quota for silica consumption and pack up. We sojourned in Cairns for a few days of decompression - visiting the rainforest by way of historic train, snorkeling and scuba diving in the Great Barrier reef, wandering the gigantic organic farmer's market, basking in the strange and wondrous humidity the whole while. But soon it was time to go home. On our last day we arose before dawn, caught our flights to Sydney and L.A. and, several hours earlier (!!) returned to daily life: Riverside in August.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Its not everyday you cut yourself on a shark tooth...

Greetings to the Droser Lab! I hope the Sierra trip was a good one this year and that you're getting settled into the routine of a new semester. Its strange not to be starting that with you.

As the subject suggests, things are going well with me in DC. I have been finding interesting fossils in the parks, although getting used to eastern geology again is quite a switch. My field sites are now along creeks, roads, or in the case of C & O Canal along rock faces blasted or drilled off more than a hundred years ago. I love the green of the city, but I have also been experiencing the ticks and chiggers that come along with the green.

Right now I am writing up reports about what I've found in the parks and making recommendations for future monitoring and protection of these sites. My internship has been extended through the fall, so I'm going to stay on and do some interpretive programs about what I've found for the parks to use. I'm looking forward to the change of pace.

Well here's a picture of me looking at one of the canal locks--they are neat because they're all built of local stone and you can see the same sedimentary structures, sometimes better exposed. And for a change of pace, jousting at a Renaissance fair I went to recently with my park service housemates.



In the east fall is coming, and I'm enjoying the crisp air. Hope you're not being blasted with too much heat in CA!


Monday, August 17, 2009

Drifting Along Splendidly



Things have been continuing at a fine pace, and the weather has cooled down a lot. Here are some new photos of the workers at their worksite.

Friday, August 14, 2009

(Mis)Adventures in the Desert

Things don't always go as planned when you're living in the middle of nowhere. Yes, our campsite is beautifully desolate, and the only sounds we hear at night are the wind rustling through the juniper trees and the ground squirrels trying to eat our dried oatmeal, and we are most definitely in the back country, but we are also 15 miles from the nearest highway and 60 miles from town. This means, of course, that when your car breaks down, you are completely stranded.

This happened to us last Monday. We'd put a full day of work in and were prepared for a nice evening of letter writing, scrabble and star gazing. We drove back to camp and parked the car in its usual spot. I decided it was time to wash my hair (probably for the first time in a week, I was so excited!) so I went to the tent to change out of my field clothes. While I was in the tent, I heard a giant explosion, so loud that I though the propane tank may have exploded! I ran out to see what happened. One of the tires on the car had blown. I guess we had punctured it on the road and it didn't actually pop until we got back to camp.

I started changing the tire, loosened all the lugs and started taking them off. Things were going fine until I got to the very last lug. I started turning it and it froze. I put all my weight behind it and the lug started bending. I knew there was no way I was going to get it off, so we moved on to plan B.

The only thing for us to do was hike to the highway. We packed supplies (water, food, flashlights, clothes) and started walking. We started our hike at 4:30 in the afternoon and didn't reach the highway until after dark. I was trying to make good time because I knew that once we reached the highway, we'd have to hitchhike into town and I was worried about trying to catch a ride in the dark.

It was surprisingly easy for us to catch a ride. After a few cars drove by, a hippie and his 7 year old daughter picked us up. He told us some crazy stories and when I thanked him for the ride, he said he was glad to pick us up because we refreshed his hitchhiking karma. Apparently he'd be having trouble catching rides lately.

Eventually everything got sorted out. We got the tire fixed and things have returned to normal.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Running Scared



Ants do like oatmeal. They don't like Roy Orbison.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Adventures in Ibex!


Work has progressed rather slowly this week. Excessive heat and afternoon thunderstorms have limited our work time to the mornings, and much of our chalking at Hintze's section L was washed away. Frustration runs high but I've re-evaluated my plans and I think I've figured a way around the problems. We can into Delta a day earlier than planned to get new supplies, including flagging, which won't be washed away by rain.

We had some more adventures with wildlife this week. While playing scrabble one evening, I noticed a little snakey peeking out at us from beneath a juniper tree. At first we thought it was a rattlesnake, but we discovered that he had no rattle! I know now that he was a gopher snake. Here's a video of him making his way slowly through our camp:



When packing up our tent to head into town, I discovered a scorpion hiding in the corner! This was probably the most terrifying event of the week, as scorpions are the only creature I'm actually nervous about. I have no idea how it got in our tent or how long it had been there, but I'm glad neither of us got stung. Here's a photo:



A golden eagle followed us down the road for a couple of minutes one morning. It was huge and glorious! We also saw a couple of packs of pronghorn antelope. Katherine got a picture of some of them:



Today is Pioneer Day, a glorious Mormon holiday that celebrates the arrival of Brigham Young and the original Mormon settlers to the Salt Lake Region. I realized yesterday that this holiday also marks the 1 year anniversary of my move from Ohio to Riverside. Here's a photo of Katherine looking a little bit like a pioneer:

Friday, July 17, 2009

Journey Through the Past - Pt. 2


The Confusion Range is incredibly beautiful. This photo was taken on the hillside above our campsite the first day we arrived.

Things are going really well. Katherine and I have managed to not go completely insane from the isolation, and in fact, I've been enjoying the remoteness of the region.

We spent most of the week at one locality, "CAMP." All of the localities that I will be collecting at were established in the 50's and 60's by an old time geologist named Lehi Hintze. He measured and marked each section. Here's a photo of me at the start of his CAMP section, measured in 1965.



So far we've measured and described the CAMP section. Collecting and sampling won't begin until we've measured and described all of the localities we'll be studying.

There's actually been some excitement out here, despite the fact that we're totally isolated. I've encountered two rattlesnakes, both while I was trying to find a place to pee. I startled the first one and he slithered into the bushes and rattled angrily at me. We documented him:



And here's the second snake I ran into. He's snoozing under a juniper branch.



We've seen tons of cute lizards and hear coyotes howling every night. There stars have been so beautiful every night. I love it out here.

Today was our first day in town since last weekend. We desperately needed showers and contact with other humans has been good for us. Unfortunately we're deep in Mormon country and I can't help but feel creeped out by most of the people here in Delta, UT. Deseret, UT is only a couple of miles from here.

Here are some more photos from the field:


Katherine "Snakeface" Steelman hanging out in camp.


These are some of clams that I'm studying.

Katherine and I signed up for PO Box in Delta so that we can receive mail. It would be awesome to get letters! Here's our address:

P.O. Box #119
Delta, UT 84624

Monday, July 13, 2009

Journey Through the Past - Pt. 1

Field work is about to begin!

Yesterday my field assistant Katherine and I began our Ordovician adventure. We left Riverside and headed up to Ely, NV - a wild west town if there ever was one. On our way, we passed through Sin City and skirted the NV-375, the Extraterrestrial Highway, which runs through central Nevada and past Area51. Here's some documentation:



I'm excited to begin the actual field work, which will take place out in the Ibex region of the Great Basin, in Utah. I'm going to be studying aspects of the Ordovician Radiation by examining the diversity of gastropods and bivalves through a Middle Ordovician succession of rocks.

Here's the non-paleontologist description: Life in the oceans experienced a major radiation during the Ordovician period (roughly 480-440 million years ago). I'm going to study this radiation event by collecting fossils of ancient snails and clams preserved in rocks in Utah, which was equatorial beachfront property during the Ordovician. I'm also going to try to reconstruct what the overall environments and ecosystems that these clams and snails looked like, in order to better understand how marine ecosystems have changed through time. The ocean looked a lot different back then but understand the ancient systems can help us better understand modern ocean ecosystems.

Here are some more photos!



This is Katherine checking out the menu of a surprisingly good Chinese restaurant in Ely, NV.


This is the wonderful Hotel Nevada, where we stayed last night.


We're going to be camping way out in the middle of nowhere by the outcrops so we won't have an cell phone or internet service, but we'll be heading into town once a week for showers and resupplies. I'll update the blog and my flickr photos as often as possible. You can check out the flickr photos here.

I also made a google map of the field localities, which you can check out here.

Monday, July 6, 2009



I know you can't watch the video here, but you can go to the youtube page and see it!

Friday, July 3, 2009

Coast to Coast
















The absolute best billboard of the drive back, I sadly did not snap a picture of. But it was for an "indian
trading post" and we had seen a lot of ads for various things there. My favorite was a plainly-painted board that proclaimed "LIVE CACTUS"! Can't get much better than that...
A few other pictures from the journey including a giant cow in Flagstaff, Sunset Crater and lava flow, Meteor Crater (I can totally see why they didn't get what it was at first) and Petrified Forest National Park, AZ. Robyn would be glad to know we ate in some fun diners as well, my favorite was the scorpion sandwich I had in New Mexico...

A few more pictures from our day in the field at NAPC and every Headlines TA's favorite, "Dunky" from the Cincinnati Museum.

More from green, leafy DC full of thunderstorms and lightning bugs at some point...

Thursday, July 2, 2009

NAPC2009!!!


I posted some pictures from NAPC on my flickr account. Check them out!

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Adventure Time

Well, the spring quarter has come to an end and summer is officially here, which means it's time for adventures!

Mary, Lidya and our newest labmate RJ will be heading off to Australia for some quality time with the Ediacaran fauna.

Erica's already headed off into the sunset, bound for Washington DC to work as a park paleontologist.

Aaron will be back and forth between teaching GEO101 at RCC and his precambrian tubes in Death Valley.

Daniel will be defecting to the Love Lab for the summer, but we forgive him because he'll be going to the Burgess Conference in August.

Kristin's wrapping up her doctorate.

I'll be out in Utah befriending Ordovician clams and snails and filming a documentary about the Ordovician Radiation with my good friend Samantha Mitchell (check her webpage out).

All in all, the summer should be good. We've all decided to update the Droser Lab Blog with tales from the field. I'll hopefully be posting weekly from the Rancher Motel in Delta, UT. Have a happy summer!

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Parmesan and Root Vegetable Lasagna

Serves 10

- 6 cups (1/2-inch) cubed peeled butternut squash (about 2 1/2 pounds)
- 2 1/4 cups (1/2-inch) cubed peeled sweet potato (about 1 pound)
- 2 cups coarsely chopped onion, divided
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- Cooking spray
- 4 cups 1% low-fat milk
- 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1 bay leaf
- 1.5 ounces all-purpose flour (about 1/3 cup)
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 1 1/4 cups (5 ounces) grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
- 9 packaged no-boil lasagna noodles
- 1 1/2 cups (6 ounces) shredded part-skim mozzarella cheese

1. Preheat oven to 450°.

2. Combine squash, potato, 1 cup chopped onion, and oil in a roasting pan coated with cooking spray, tossing to coat vegetables. Bake at 450° for 30 minutes or until vegetables are tender, stirring once; set aside.

3. Combine remaining 1 cup onion, milk, nutmeg, cinnamon, and bay leaf in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat; bring to a simmer. Remove from heat; let stand 15 minutes. Strain milk mixture through a fine sieve over a bowl; discard solids. Return milk mixture to pan. (NOTE: the magazine noted the importance of cleaning the pan well before refilling it with the milk mixture.) Weigh or lightly spoon flour into a dry measuring cup; level with a knife. Add flour, salt, and pepper to milk mixture, stirring with a whisk. Cook over medium heat 10 minutes or until thick, stirring frequently with a whisk. Remove from heat; stir in Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese.

4. Preheat oven to 375°.

5. Spread 1/2 cup milk mixture in bottom of a 13 x 9–inch baking dish coated with cooking spray. Arrange 3 noodles over milk mixture; top with half of squash mixture, 1/2 cup mozzarella, and 1 cup milk mixture. Repeat layer with noodles, squash mixture, mozzarella, and milk mixture. Top with remaining 3 noodles. Spread remaining milk mixture over noodles, and sprinkle with remaining 1/2 cup mozzarella. Cover with foil coated with cooking spray. Bake at 375° for 30 minutes. Uncover and bake an additional 20 minutes. Let stand 10 minutes.

-From Cooking Light

Bead Party!



The women of the earth sciences department enjoyed cooking and sampling traditional food while admiring hundreds of beautiful paper beads made by Ugandan women. The fair trade organization, Beads for Life, allows women to earn enough to feed their families. A wonderful afternoon was enjoyed by all
and you can find someone modeling their
carefully-chosen purchases in a hallway near you!

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Droser Lab ON TOUR!


The Great Basin...
#1 SPRING BREAK DESTINATION IN THE US!