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Thread: Trilobites near Antelope Spring
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03-21-2011, 10:54 AM #1
Trilobites near Antelope Spring
More to come later, but I spent the weekend out west of Delta digging some trilobites. It was a blast. We stopped by the hermit's house in Marjum Pass to check it out as well. More details to come when I get the pictures from the camera.
Oh, and I found a Camelbak bottle at the Hermit's House. If you lost yours out there, describe it to me to claim it.
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03-21-2011 10:54 AM # ADS
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03-21-2011, 12:31 PM #2
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03-22-2011, 12:07 AM #3
Details....
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03-22-2011, 05:05 PM #4
Content removed
Last edited by uintahiker; 02-07-2012 at 11:52 AM. Reason: Personal preference
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03-22-2011, 10:34 PM #5
They are experimenting with Cosmic Ray Guns
Real Answer:
http://www.telescopearray.org/
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04-07-2011, 10:06 AM #6
Wow sounds exactly like a few trips I took a few years back. Your scorpion looks like a Northern Scorpion paruroctonus boreus or a Yellow Ground Scorpion Vaejovis confusus, both are common in the West Desert. I found the Wellsville trilobites. If I remember right the canyon was Antimony. Just watch for the right shale above the Brigham quartzite and pull over. I stopped at a house and knocked. I asked the old man if he wouldn't mind me jumping his back fence. He said, "Sure, just make sure you are out by dark, leave some trilobites on the porch so I know you made it out safe." Cool old guy but he couldn't make the hike and wanted me to mule for him. Reasonable trade I suppose.
The hill is straight up, even a 20 year old superhero will run out of gas in no time. I am not sure what the elevation gain was but wow. Lots of rock scrambling and talus slopes with a few spots requiring minor class 5 climbing skills. I would never recommend it for sure unless you are confident in your skills in treacherous exposed rocky areas. I got to the right shale layer and prompty filled a backpack with trilobites so heavy I couldn't lift it. I never moved farther than 30 feet and didn't have to split a thing, the fossils were laying everywhere. I spent the next hour choosing keepers. I ripped both straps on the backpack on the way out and had to carry it. Left the old man a nice stack of finds.
Fossils are easy to come by in Logan Canyon in the right limestone layers crinoids (sea lilies) and brachiopods (clams and such) are super abundant. The sharp eye can spot cephalopods (squidy thingys) and Horn corals.
Never made it out to the west desert trilobite beds I have enough to last several lifetimes. The Dugway geode beds are cool. Collection is so easy you might take waaaaaay more than you could ever need, enough to colapse every shelf in the house. We had 4 inch Dusky Clawed Scorpions Anuroctonus phaiodactylus under our tent in the morning. It reached 114 degrees while I was there, hottest I have ever seen. On the way back (made it as far as Provo) we had vehicle problems. Eerie that our trips sound so similar.
Sunstone Knoll is easy to find. The labradorite plagiocase is cool it looks like bottle shards but is weathered rounded. I enjoyed hiking out on the alkali flats in back of it more though. Topaz Mountain is incredible. I found purple fluorite, bixbite cubes, stilbinite needle clumps, sherry colored topaz, and red beryl crystals. You can look for surface stuff if you want but the roads have whitish gray volcanic ryolite rocks at the edges, a couple of smacks with a rock hammer will reveal treasures beyond your wildest rock hounding imagination. I would add obsidian, jasper nuggets and apache tears to your to do list. Volcanic material is everywhere in the milford area. I am pretty sure I know exactly which rock collecting book you are using.
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04-11-2011, 06:42 AM #7
If the book you're referring to is this one http://www.mapstore.utah.gov/mp95-4.html, you're right on. Awesome book.
I'll make it out to the west desert for another trip sometime. There is a ton of cool stuff out there. Utah & Colorado are similar in a few ways. In Colorado, everybody recreates west of I-25. In Utah, pretty much everybody looks east of I-15.
I'll have to make it up to the Wellsvilles sometimes. Digging those trilobites out west was pretty sweet.
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04-11-2011, 05:16 PM #8
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06-23-2013, 01:38 PM #9
Hi, I am new to this site.
I have been to Brigham city to the canyon you mention several times ,but with not luck,do you have the exact GPS coordinate of the actual collecting location.
Thanks.
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