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New I paid homage to the relics of our common ancestors in Newfoundland.
It's at Mistaken Point in Newfoundland. The locals are trying hard to get listed as a World Heritage site. In this case "heritage" takes on an additional meaning.

Darwin predicted such fossils could be found.
Alex

"There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."

-- Isaac Asimov
New Thanks. Amazingly I was not yet aware of that site.
Unfortunately, there seem to be no good magazines for paleontology as thre are for archeology. There were one or two, but they have stopped publishing.

But, it is good that we continue finding and organizing much more information on all these details God created to mislead and delude us.

Surely we will eventually find the fossil of a feather from an angel wing, lost during the first hours of creation.

Ooops, I think I just published an idea some scam artist is sure to pick up.

One of my favorites was a detailed article on the finding of Pharaohs army in the Red Sea, with photos.

Some lady who was trying to "save" me by email came across that one and joyously sent me a link as "proof" of the accuracy of the Bible. I pointed to the fine print at the bottom of the article that assured everyone the whole thing was a hoax. I never heard from her again.

A whole bunch of evangelical groups were sending that one out - like politicians waving Onion articles as "proof" of their policies.
New Something strange in there
The Mistaken Point fossils were preserved by being blanketed with layers of fine volcanic ash. Volcanic ash is ideal for radiometric dating, and this has enabled the Mistaken Point fossils to be dated at approximately 565 million years old

and
Study of the surrounding sedimentary rocks has shown that the Mistaken Point organisms lived in a deep-water environment, far below the depth to which sunlight or surface waves could have reached.

The latter would also preclude getting covered in fine ash. They only way I can combine both is if the organism fossilized first, along with the seabottom rising, and then getting covered once exposed. But that would put their age back a good chunk before the ash dating.
New There may be more here:
Mistaken Point Ecological Reserve
In normal conditions, when marine organisms die, only bones, shells, and other hard parts are preserved as fossils. The soft-bodied creatures at Mistaken Point lived millions of years before animals developed skeletons, but the imprints of their soft tissues were preserved in place on the muddy sea floor when they were suddenly buried by repeated volcanic ash-falls. The volcanic ash layers contain zircon, which makes it possible for geologists to accurately date the different fossil layers. Fossils of similar age are found in Russia and Australia, but the variety found at Mistaken Point make the site unique.
So, it sounds like repeated volcanic ash-falls that settled to the ocean floor.
Alex

"There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."

-- Isaac Asimov
New Had a hard time picturing the dispersal to below 3000'
without airborne ash being spread so thin that it would no longer be noticeable. However, it seems a pyroclastic flow of the right temperature and composition can travel ~500 miles on the water, dropping ash all along the way.
New I'd love to see that ... on video, of course
--

Drew
     Vegetarian Fish Sauce. - (Andrew Grygus) - (9)
         So, seaweed and mushrooms have to be slaughtered to make it? - (a6l6e6x) - (8)
             Yes, and the pressing ethical question is . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (7)
                 I paid homage to the relics of our common ancestors in Newfoundland. - (a6l6e6x) - (5)
                     Thanks. Amazingly I was not yet aware of that site. - (Andrew Grygus)
                     Something strange in there - (scoenye) - (3)
                         There may be more here: - (a6l6e6x) - (2)
                             Had a hard time picturing the dispersal to below 3000' - (scoenye) - (1)
                                 I'd love to see that ... on video, of course -NT - (drook)
                 Yup, closer to animals than plants - (crazy)

The sweeter the blood is, the fatter the fleas.
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