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Catalog Data

Creator:
National Museum of National History (U.S.)  Search this
Subject:
Springer, Frank 1848-1927  Search this
Kohls, David  Search this
Cushman, Joseph A (Joseph Augustine) 1881-1949  Search this
Walcott, Charles D (Charles Doolittle) 1850-1927  Search this
National Museum of Natural History (U.S.) Department of Paleobiology  Search this
United States National Museum  Search this
Type:
Electronic records
Collection descriptions
Web sites
Place:
North America
Europe
Burgess Shale (B.C.)
Canadian Rockies (B.C. and Alta.)
Mazon River (Ill.)
Green River Formation
Date:
2019
2019-2020
Notes:
Electronic List in accession file.
Folder List in accession file.
For a description of the record series of which these materials form a part, refer to the "Forms part of" above.
Organization:
Unarranged
Summary:
This accession consists of five sections of the National Museum of Natural History website maintained by the Department of Paleobiology that were removed during a recent refresh of the site. The section dedicated to Joseph Augustine Cushman, known as the father of American micropaleontology, was crawled on November 20, 2019. Cushman was a pioneer in the use of foraminifera to support oil exploration in North America, developing a classification method that for the first time allowed foraminifera to be used for borehole correlation. This website section provides biographical information, contributions to science, and information about related collections at the National Museum of Natural History. The Burgess Shale section, crawled on November 20, 2019, provides information about fossils discovered by Secretary Charles D. Walcott in 1909 in the Burgess Shale rock formation in the Canadian Rockies. These fossils are more than half a billion years old and reside in the National Museum of Natural History collections. The Springer Echinoderm Collection section, crawled on November 20, 2019, provides information about the world's largest repository of fossil crinoids, donated by collector Frank Springer to the United States National Museum in 1911. The fossils are mostly from Paleozoic sequences in North America and Europe.The Mazon Creek Fossil Flora section, crawled on November 20, 2019, discusses the Mazon Creek (River) fossil deposit which extends over a wide area of northeastern Illinois. The fossils are best known from concretions or nodules of siderite, an iron carbonate mineral, which generally must be fractured to expose a plant or animal fossil within. Fossils from this area reside in many museums, including a modest-size collection at the National Museum of Natural History. The Green River Fossils Collections section, crawled on April 6, 2020, discusses the National Museum of Natural History's fossil collection from the Green River Formation in Colorado and Utah as well as the collector of the majority of the fossils, amateur paleontologist David Kohls. The fossils are approximately 50 million years old. Each rock usually contains an abundance of insects and floral material, primarily leaves. Also found are spiders, downy feathers, flowers, and reptiles. Materials are in electronic format.
Repository Loc.:
Smithsonian Institution Archives Capital Gallery, Suite 3000, MRC 507; 600 Maryland Avenue, SW; Washington, DC 20024-2520
Topic:
Web sites  Search this
Museums--Public relations  Search this
Natural history museums  Search this
Paleobiology  Search this
Paleontologists  Search this
Micropaleontology  Search this
Foraminifera, Fossil  Search this
Petroleum--Prospecting  Search this
Petrology  Search this
Fossils  Search this
Formations (Geology)  Search this
Echinodermata  Search this
Museums--Collection management  Search this
Crinoidea  Search this
Siderite  Search this
Local number:
SIA Acc. 21-054
See more items in:
Website Records 1994-2020 [National Museum of Natural History (U.S.)]
Data Source:
Smithsonian Institution Archives
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_arc_404585