Founders Symposium 2011
The West That Was: Exploring Colorado’s Fossil Past
February 12 & 13, 2011
Colorado thousands and millions of years ago was a very different place
from the Rocky Mountain region we know today. From mammoths that grazed
near alpine swamps, todinosaurs that roamed Cretaceous beaches, to sea
lilies that swayed in ancient seas, our
state has a rich fossil history.
Keynote Presentations
James I. Kirkland, PhD, State Paleontologist, Utah Geological Survey
Taphofacies in the Fruita
Paleo Area (FPA): implications for
reconstructing Upper Jurassic paleoecosystems
Vince Matthews, PhD, State Geologist & Director, Colorado
Geological Survey
Colorado’s Colorful and
Fantastic Geology
Kirk Johnson, PhD, Vice President of
Research & Collections and Chief Curator,
Denver Museum of
Nature and Science
K-T Boundry
Ian Miller, PhD, Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Snowmass Fossils: Mammoths,
Mastodons and other discoveries
from the recent Snowmass, Colorado, Ice Age findings
Speakers
Louis H. Taylor, PhD
(moderator),
Denver Museum of Nature &
Science
The Colorado State Fossil,
Stegosaurus, and similar
dinosaur-bearing beds in Portugal
Malcolm Bedell,Jr. Western Interior Paleontological Society
Deep Time on
The Santa Fe Trail: the Oceans of Baculite Mesa
Steve W. Veatch, Friends of Florissant
Florissant Fossil Beds
Linda Soar/Jim Bullecks, Western Interior Paleontological Society
Beachcombing the Broken Rib
two miles high
(Fossils from the Flat Tops area)
Michael L. Graham, Western Interior Paleontological Society
Douglas Pass, Green River
Formation Fossils
Sue Ware, PhD, Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Death in High Places: the
fossil fauna of Porcupine Cave,
South Park, Colorado
Emmett Evanoff, PhD, University of Northern Colorado
White River fauna
John R. Foster, PhD, Museum of Western Colorado
Late Jurassic Lilliput: The
Microvertebrate World of the
Morrison Formation
Martin G. Lockley, PhD, University of Colorado at Denver
Dinosaurs and Dinosaur Tracks
of Colorado
Steve D. Jorgenson, Western Interior Paleontological Society
Ontogeny of Didymoceras Hyatt,
1894, in the Late Cretaceous (Middle and Upper Campanian) U.S. Western
Interior