Added: 3 years ago
From: gchFam
Views: 3,316
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  • The America we drive past on our way to no-where...

  • HEY! I am mabye going there! TODAY!

  • Very interesting!  Thanks for the video

  • That brought back memories of exploring that region. Thank you.

  • stet1965: Last time I went the rules were that you could take a slabs the size of your hand, but no larger.

  • Wow - great video! Nice detailed close-ups! I visited the region years ago in my college Geology class and I think it will be worth the 600 mile trip to get there and explore the region again. I know a free permit is required to collect but are you allowed to take a slab or two from the site?

  • I am from Springfield and go to Caesars Creek quite often. A good place for fossils is by the spillway where a creek drains into it. There is a rusty fence strung across it, but it is easy to duck and climb up. I swear, every rock I picked up in that old creek bed was a fossil. I even found what appeared to be a fossilized chunk of coral.

  • Hey great video. I live about 15 mins from Waynesville, and I just remembered yesterday how cool it was when my class whent on a fieldtrip there way back in the day. I'm gonna head up this, or next weekend I think.

    I have a question, if anyone can answer it-

    What is the chemical make-up of the most common fossils that are at Ceasers Creek? Like, if you broke up/crushed some fossils, and mixed the fossils in water....what would the water mostly consist of? ie: nitrogen/hydrogen? Please LMK.TY

  • The rock is calcite (CaC03). (I asked a geolgist!)

    "When a drop of dilute hydrochloric acid is placed on a piece of limestone, the acid reacts with the calcite and forms bubbles of carbon dioxide. This fizz reaction is so characteristic of limestone that many geologists carry a small bottle of dilute hydrochloric acid into the field for a rapid and easy identification of limestone."

    I don't have any HCl, dilute or otherwise, so I soaked a sample in Vinegar and found bubbles, likely of CO2.

  • Ok. Thanks for the reply.

  • Update on the vinegar experiment. Tiny bubbles came off the small sample for hours.After a few hours most of the rock had dissolved. The fossil seems undisturbed! I think it is also calcite, but the molecules are more tightly bound. I will try it on some other small pieces containing fossils. I used distilled white vinegar that we use for salad dressing.

  • Awesome! So I can use vinegar on the fossils I find, and it will not hurt the fossil's details? That's really cool, thanks for the info...inform me whith any other info. Thanks again!

  • Fantastic video! Caesars Creek is quite possibly my favorite national park to visit in Ohio. I've been there countless times myself and I find something different each time I visit. Also, big props on music choice! Gustav Holst (The Planets - Mars) is one of my all time favorites :)

  • Thanks for posting .I have a large series of videos introducing each fossil species .I also have paleo lectures .Just search under "CINCINNATI FOSSILS"

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