COAL AND FOSSIL FOOTPRINTS
The abundance of plant life in the Colorado area during the Cretaceous period is indicated by the extent of coal deposits of this age. About one-fourth the area of the state is underlain by coal seams varying in thickness from a few inches to fifty feet or more, most of it being Cretaceous. In the northern Colorado district the coal-bearing formation is the Laramie. Near Denver there is some coal in the Arapahoe formation which overlies the Laramie and is of later age.
Coal mines often produce excellent plant fossils, and occasionally other evidence of prehistoric life. In a mine near Canon City, Colorado, a series of natural casts of dinosaur feet was taken from the overlying rock after the coal had been removed. One of these, in the Denver Museum of Natural History, is seen to consist of sandstone inside a very thin layer of dark clay. Flattened against the lower surface is the carbonized stem of a Cretaceous plant which grew in the swamp where the coal deposit was formed.
Since the shape of dinosaur feet is unmistakable we can only assume that a large reptile of this type walked over the surface of swampy ground in which a great thickness of decaying vegetation had accumulated. A layer of mud settled over the top and became sufficiently firm to retain the mold of the feet as the animal moved along. Any plant material either on the mud or included in it was pushed to the bottom of the impressions and flattened out by the weight of the huge creature. Then sand was washed into the footprints from some nearby source during a heavy rainstorm.
Following these events there was probably a subsidence of the area, and a great thickness of rock-making sediments was built over the ancient swamp. The buried vegetation gradually became converted into coal, the sand consolidated into a firm sandstone, and the mud produced the shales forming the roof of the present mine, which is now at an elevation of a mile above sea level as a consequence of the general uplifting of the Rocky Mountain region during late Cretaceous and subsequent time.
When the coal was removed, the hard sandstone casts separated readily from the softer shales surrounding them. A small amount of the shale adheres to the sandstone, and some of the flattened vegetation, now in the condition of coal, still remains attached.