Fig. 3. Portion of the "Morris sheet" of the U. S. Geological Survey, to show topography and situations of the exposures of fossil-bearing shales at Mazon River, a, the "Bartlett place," the so-called "upper beds"; b, "lower beds."
The writer was able, during July 1911, to spend a week studying the fossil beds ([479]) at Mazon Creek. The object of the visit was primarily to collect Amphibia, but although several thousand nodules were examined, not one contained an amphibian nor a fragment of one. Mr. J. C. Carr, of Morris, Illinois, who has collected at Mazon Creek for more than 30 years, has never collected an amphibian. These facts interested me in making the following comparison: If we take 100,000 nodules as a basis for computation of the rarity of the various forms, something like the following will be the approximate result of the investigation:
Of 100,000 nodules, 20,000 will be barren or contain only indeterminate fragments; 68,500 will contain plants; 7,500 will contain insects, Crustacea, myriapods, scorpions, spiders, and other arthropods; 3,900 will contain fish coprolites or scales; 95 may contain fish or fragments of fish; 4 may contain mollusks; and 1 may contain an amphibian or a fragment of one.
Perhaps even 100,000 is low as a basis of estimate. Mr. Carr was of the opinion that 1 nodule in every 500,000 might contain an amphibian.
The beds from which the nodules are usually collected occur along both banks and in the bottom of the creek, in two localities. One locality known as the Bartlett place is situated 8 miles southeast of Morris, in Grundy County, Illinois, Wauponsee Township, N.W. quarter, section 30, Township 33, Range 8, the land being now owned by Mrs. Emma Akerly, of Wilmington, Illinois.
The fossil-bearing nodules occur throughout 6 to 8 feet of shale along both banks of the creek at the "upper beds" ([plate 1, fig. 3]), as the Bartlett place is called. They may also be seen in the bed of the creek, when the water is low ([plate 1, fig. 4]), still embedded in the shale. With a potato fork the shale is easily turned and the nodules come out like potatoes. One sometimes finds a "pocket" of nodules from which as many as a peck may be secured. Nearly every nodule has a fossil at the "upper beds," but all of the fossils are not well preserved, possibly only 1 or 2 out of every 10 being worth carrying to the museum. The nodules crack best when wet, and it requires some skill to crack them evenly. They seem quite light and, in one place where the stream curves, are piled in a long windrow. On this were found, in nodules cracked by the frost, several good crustaceans and many good plants.
Table of Pennsylvanic Formations.
Series Northern Appalachian. Bituminous.
Pennsylvania-Ohio. Illinois.
Pennsylvanic
{
{ Coal Measures
{ { {(*) (Salt Fork).
{ { Monongahela or Upper Productive Coal Measures {Break.
{ {
{ { Conemaugh or Lower Barren Ames limestone near middle:
{ { (*) (Pitcairn) Coal No. 6.
{ {
{ { { Freeport
{ { Allegheny or Lower Coal Measures { (*) (Cannelton) Coal No. 2 (*).
{ { { Kittanning (*). (Morris?) (Mazon Creek).
{ { { (Linton).
{ { { Clarion.
{
{ Pottsville
{ {
{ { Home wood.
{ { Mercer.
{ { Conoquenessing.
{ { Sharon.
(*) marks the position of the Amphibian-producing horizons in these regions. (After Schuchert.)