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paleonet RE: Classic Fish in a Fish Dig



Hi Mike:

Please send me a pdf of this interesting paper.

Thanks Mike.

Blue skies,

Rob

Henry W. Robison, Ph.D.
Professor of Biology
Southern Arkansas University
P. O. Box 9354
Magnolia, AR  71754-9354

Office Phone:  870-235-4273
Home Phone:  870-234-3013
FAX:  870-235-5005
email:  hwrobison@saumag.edu


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-vrtpaleo@usc.edu [mailto:owner-vrtpaleo@usc.edu]On Behalf Of
Mike Everhart
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2005 4:37 PM
To: Vert Paleo list; Paleonet
Subject: Classic Fish in a Fish Dig


All,
While on a field trip in western Kansas with George F. Sternberg in 
1952, Walter Sorenson (AMNH) found the tip of large caudal fin eroding 
from the chalk. Sorenson gave the fossil, sight unseen, to Sternberg who 
excavated a 14 foot long, Late Cretaceous fish (_Xiphactinus audax_) 
with a smaller fish inside as stomach contents.
http://www.oceansofkansas.com/images2/gs-xip2.jpg

The specimen is currently on display in the Sternberg Museum at Hays, 
KS, and is regarded as one of the "most photographed" fossils in the world.
http://www.oceansofkansas.com/Sternbrg/xiphact2.jpg

Over the weekend, I came across a brief paper written by Myrl V. Walker, 
George Sternberg's successor at the Sternberg Museum, and published by 
Fort Hays State University. The paper, entitled "The Impossible Fossil" 
is a very detailed account of the excavation, recovery and preparation 
of this famous specimen (FHSM VP-333 / FHSM VP-334.  Besides being 
interesting from a historical standpoint, the article is a very good, 
step-by-step account of how to take large fossils out of the ground 
already mounted in plaster, and ready for exhibit preparation. While 
this is "old technology" to be sure, it is also classic George F. 
Sternberg at his best.

If you are interested, I have made a .pdf file (1 MB) of the article and 
will send it on request:
.
Walker, M.V. 1982. The Impossible Fossil. University Forum, Fort Hays 
State University 26: 4pp.

Regards,

Mike Everhart
Adjunct Curator of Paleontology
Sternberg Museum of Natural History
Fort Hays State University, Hays, KS
www.oceansofkansas.com