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We walk the Florissant Fossil Beds and trace how volcanic mudflows turned a living redwood forest into a world-class fossil site. Along the way, we meet Eocene mammals, explore ancient climate, and reflect on the human choices that saved this place from development.
• planning trails around the visitor center and winter hours
• overview of Eocene mammals and insect fossils
• how lahars buried trees and silicified wood
• reading tree rings for ancient climate insight
• redwood cloning and why redwoods no longer grow here
• Lake Florissant’s brief life and rich fossil layers
• the Big Stump, souvenir damage, and saw marks
• Charlotte Hill’s butterfly and the scientist lineage
• preservation vs development and the 1969 park designation
• ongoing research to locate buried stumps and future discoveries
If you have any questions or comments about this site, let me know by sending a message!
Support the show
By Craig aka thenaturalmedic5
11 ratings
Send us a text
We walk the Florissant Fossil Beds and trace how volcanic mudflows turned a living redwood forest into a world-class fossil site. Along the way, we meet Eocene mammals, explore ancient climate, and reflect on the human choices that saved this place from development.
• planning trails around the visitor center and winter hours
• overview of Eocene mammals and insect fossils
• how lahars buried trees and silicified wood
• reading tree rings for ancient climate insight
• redwood cloning and why redwoods no longer grow here
• Lake Florissant’s brief life and rich fossil layers
• the Big Stump, souvenir damage, and saw marks
• Charlotte Hill’s butterfly and the scientist lineage
• preservation vs development and the 1969 park designation
• ongoing research to locate buried stumps and future discoveries
If you have any questions or comments about this site, let me know by sending a message!
Support the show