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g-photolr

“There are places I remember …”

Of course there are.  There are places that all of us remember.  And there are other places that no one remembers, because they were lost long before there were any people.  But the Earth remembers.

I spend much of my life asking the Earth about these memories, and this blog is largely about what I have learned.  Most of the places I have learned about are ancient shorelines and tropical seas dating from long before the time of the oldest dinosaurs.  Much of what you will find here discusses the fossils of ancient life forms and the environments in which they lived, but much is also about me, and about how we learn about the past.  And some of this blog is about very little at all.  Because like almost everyone else, I am often concerned with the minutiae of my own existence …

Graham Young is Curator of Geology and Paleontology at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg.

unless otherwise stated, all images on this site are © The Manitoba Museum or © Graham Young; text © Graham Young, 2009 -2013

32 Comments leave one →
  1. Steven Kukla's avatar
    Steven Kukla permalink
    July 21, 2009 5:17 am

    Just returned from my 1st trip to the Manitoba Escarpment, where I also participated in my 1st marine fossil excursion dig, with the CFDC folks in Morden. What a delight. Fell in love with the area, with the dig, with geology and prehistoric life forms, and I long to return. But that’ll be a while, so I started researching the area and stumbled upon your great blog. Thanks. Hopefully I’ll make it to your museum next time.

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      August 7, 2009 9:23 am

      Thank you for your kind remarks. Yes, make sure you visit our museum the next time you are in this area!

  2. Carl G. Schuster's avatar
    August 7, 2009 6:47 am

    You have a fine, long term view of the topic. Keep in mind that in the relatively shorter term, particularly in Canada, and other recently deglaciated northern parts, the the land has risen by ca. 1000 feet in the last ca.8000 years. I have read estimates far higher than that for Scandinavia. What makes this notable is the admonition in Book I, Chapter 5 of Claudius Ptolemy’s “Geographia” of ca. 150 AD (Stevenson Translation, Dover Edition, 1991)

    “Attention must be paid to the latest researches because the earth, in the course of time undergoes change.” Keep up the great work and sharing with us.

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      August 7, 2009 9:22 am

      Thanks, Carl. We have had the opportunity to see the Hudson Bay beach ridges from a helicopter – they are quite marvellous. I am saving that story for a future post!

  3. Francine's avatar
    Francine permalink
    August 14, 2009 6:30 am

    Thoroughly wonderful pages.

  4. lee smith's avatar
    lee smith permalink
    September 27, 2010 4:12 am

    hello im writing to see if you can help me. we recently found a fossil/ bone structure down the local shorline of saltburn by the sea.A man from whitby was shown a picture and he thinks it from the ice age era. it 3ft high, 2ft6 wide at the bottom. tapers up to roughly 8 inch shaped a bit like a ladle has a ball socket on top of the bone plus to other bones branching from the top weighing in between three and four stone. if this is of any interest to you please contact me on lnl_smith@hotmail.com

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      September 27, 2010 9:08 am

      Lee, please take a look at the e-mail I sent you.

  5. David Greenwood's avatar
    May 5, 2011 8:46 pm

    Graham! This is great! More fossils!

    I was actually cruising the web looking for some of the whackier publicity a paper on an Eocene giant ant from Wyoming that Bruce Archibald, Kirk Johnson (Denver Museum of Nature & Science), Rolf Mathewes and I had come out today (May 4, Proc. Roy. Soc. B) and stumbled upon your blog. Impressive.

    Was great to have you out in Brandon this winter. Next time we’ll have you out in summer so we can dig for some Paleocene plants!

    Keep it up!
    Dave Greenwood, Brandon

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      May 10, 2011 11:03 pm

      David, thank you for your kind comments. I’m sorry I had missed them, as they had been identified as “spam” for some strange reason. I hope to get out there to use your fabulous microscope setup, maybe some time this summer?

      • David Greenwood's avatar
        May 13, 2011 7:51 pm

        Absolutely. The ‘scopes are always happy to have fossils placed beneath their lenses, even non-plant fossils. 🙂

        I think I will offer a better restaurant than the last one we tried. Perhaps Chez Greenwood! Hopefully all the water will subside and you can actually get to Brandon!

      • Graham's avatar
        Graham permalink*
        May 13, 2011 9:05 pm

        Thanks David. Let’s figure out when this might work, post-inundation!

  6. Allan T. Scholz's avatar
    Allan T. Scholz permalink
    December 15, 2011 2:15 pm

    I would like to use the image of Amyzon from the Horsefly Fossil locality in a book that I am preparing on Fishes of Eastern Washington: A Natural History. The same species occurs at a fossil site in Republic, WA. This book will be published as a not for profit book with about 500 copies printed. Thank you for your attention to this matter.

    Allan T. Scholz, Ph.D.
    Professor of Biology
    Eastern Washington University
    Cheney, WA

  7. Meredith's avatar
    Meredith permalink
    January 29, 2012 1:04 pm

    I love your piece on the Redpath Museum. In which corner did you find the mini-diorama of the dinosaurs? I can’t believe I missed that! It is so sweet. It’s like missing the caramel in the box of chocolates.

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      January 29, 2012 2:41 pm

      Hi Meredith. To the best of my recollection, it was somewhere in the middle near the dinosaurs (though I could be wrong!).

  8. Gator Woman's avatar
    March 23, 2013 5:57 am

    Always look forward to your postings. Thank you for your absolute dedication to the science.

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      March 23, 2013 10:11 am

      Thank you for your kind comment!

  9. Ev Ward de Roo's avatar
    July 8, 2013 8:12 pm

    Thank you for this explanation.

  10. Linda Grashoff's avatar
    July 24, 2013 2:00 pm

    About your July 19 posting: Knowing so little about geology, I appreciate the education in your narrative. I’m wowed by your portrayal of scale and distance in these photographs. Your second, fourth, and sixth shots do a great job depicting distance looking down. I find that hard to do. In the second one, especially, I can feel that dropoff. Hmm, doesn’t seem that you’d be able to get that shot while keeping “clear of all embankments.” Glad you didn’t fall.

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      July 24, 2013 4:43 pm

      Linda, many thanks for your comments!

  11. Daniel's avatar
    Daniel permalink
    February 5, 2015 10:19 pm

    Happy New Year Graham, time flies, it would be the 6th year since I follow yr blog. IT was so fast, I thought it was just 2 or 3 yrs ago when I joined here. Thank you for the info and stories. Well, I guess, after so many years, would you consider changing back the cover page photo to the one with rocks and boulders on the shoreline?

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      February 5, 2015 10:22 pm

      Thank you, Daniel. You’re right, I should change it – maybe even to something different again? And I have some new posts in the works – soon!

  12. Karsten Wall's avatar
    June 19, 2019 1:41 pm

    Hello, I am working on a project about Pisew and Kwasitchewan Falls. I’m trying to understand the geological events that made these falls and am kind of hitting a wall in my research. All I could find was basically one sentence in the Wikipedia article that has no reference attached to it. Do you know of any other information or resources that I can look at to help my research. Thanks for you help.

  13. karstenwall's avatar
    karstenwall permalink
    June 19, 2019 1:43 pm

    Hello, I am working on a project about Pisew and Kwasitchewan Falls. I’m trying to understand the geological events that made these falls and am kind of hitting a wall in my research. All I could find was basically one sentence in the Wikipedia article that has no reference attached to it. Do you know of any other information or resources that I can look at to help my research? Thanks.

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      July 2, 2019 9:47 pm

      Hi Karsten. Sorry, I have been away for a while – I don’t know much about it, but would recommend contacting the Manitoba Geological Survey.

  14. Sam Armstrong's avatar
    Sam Armstrong permalink
    December 13, 2022 7:35 pm

    Hey Graham, very interesting blog, i stumbled upon it while trying to find info about the cat head cliffs near mcbeth point.
    I was wondering if you could estimate the height of the tallest cliffs in the region?
    Also if you’ve ever come across any other limestone cliffs in the interlake send me a message.
    Im interested in the potential for rock climbing

    Sam

  15. Dan Funk's avatar
    Dan Funk permalink
    December 31, 2024 7:58 am

    hello good sir, may I please use one of your Carberry desert stills in my YouTube video? Thank you so much.
    Dan Funk

    Winnipeg

    • Graham's avatar
      Graham permalink*
      December 31, 2024 11:32 am

      Hi Dan, can you send me a few details about your Youtube video, such as its length, general storyline and purpose, and if you will be making money from it? Many thanks!

      • dan's avatar
        dan permalink
        December 31, 2024 12:19 pm

        Of course! I would be using it for a music ‘video’, the ‘video’ being your still of Carberry desert. The song is called ElectroDesert Spy, an instrumental. I

      • Dan Funk's avatar
        Dan Funk permalink
        January 1, 2025 2:56 pm

        Of course! I would be using it for a music ‘video’, the ‘video’ being your still of Carberry desert. The song is called ElectroDesert Spy, an instrumental. I am just a lowly hack having fun and don’t get many views at all. I anticipate making NO monies from said video. 

        The project name is inimitibilia and is a collection of various types of songs, loosely hard rock, this particular song being very atmospheric and laid back. I can send you a snippet of the song I want to use the picture for if you like.

        I would credit you in the description and put in any links if you so choose. Would be ever so grateful.

        I like to use local sources and have used pictures from Heathe Hinam in the past. She is an artist and photographer and has graciously allowed me to use a picture of the Aurora Borealis in another one of my ‘videos’. 

        Hope this helps!

        Thank you

        Dan

      • Graham's avatar
        Graham permalink*
        January 2, 2025 10:32 am

        Dan, that sounds fine. Please go ahead and use the Carberry image(s) for that purpose.

      • talentedcrusaded5b54fe511's avatar
        talentedcrusaded5b54fe511 permalink
        January 2, 2025 11:01 am

        😃Thank you! Shall I use your name for the credit or the website please?

      • Graham's avatar
        Graham permalink*
        January 7, 2025 1:30 pm

        You can just use my name.

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