The Object at Hand
From a forest that flourished 207 million years ago, the Sherman Logs bear stony witness to a general's curiosity--and life in an age gone by
- By Adele Conover
- Smithsonian magazine, June 1997, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Ancient trees like those in Arizona tell us a good deal about the now-lost world in which they flourished. Though they are as hard as quartz, they are pockmarked with telltale signs of life. We can see the tunnels where ancient insects bored into them. Geologist Tim Demko and his colleagues have found hundreds of fossilized hives in the trees, suggesting that an insect resembling the modern bee may have been buzzing about 100 million years before flowers came into existence. These finds, in addition to much fossil evidence of other plants and a variety of animals, have led scientists to conjure up the vision of an entire ecosystem.
Today, the research continues. But its subject matter, apparently, is still disappearing. Despite a guard force of seven National Park Service rangers, and fences, warning signs and the threat of a $275 fine, about 12 to 14 tons of the fossil wood disappears from the Petrified Forest every year. The culprits, according to Chief Ranger Pat Quinn, are usually "your everyday honest visitors" seeking souvenirs.
By Adele Conover
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Comments (1)
I truly enjoyed reading this because it reminds me that history repeats itself. Just as the "Sherman" artifacts were "saved" in their naturally occuring and found location, I believe a specimen of mine was discovered and saved on a much more modern scale. While digging with modern machinery, petrified wood was discovered in it's natural state. I live in MD and was told that it came from this area. It is quite a large log that resembles an actual tree and has even fooled people when we told them it was in fact petrified as they tried to move it by hand. It truly looks just like an old tree you'd find on the ground in the woods(except with tiny crystals and nice coloring). It has never been authenticated, appraised or anything but we know we have a real gem. A gem just like the two that were saved by Mr.Sherman in the 1800's. Wow, pretty neat Huh?
Posted by Kristina Fisher on April 16,2011 | 02:40 PM