Subject: [Tweeters] Climate, Fossils and Motorcycle Trips
Date: Jan 6 14:16:32 2011
From: Larry Schwitters - lpatters at ix.netcom.com


John,

Perhaps there was a wing of the Museum you missed that explained Plate
Tectonics. Especially the part about how the locations of the
different land masses has changed.

Larry Schwitters
Issaquah
On Jan 6, 2011, at 1:56 PM, johntubbs at comcast.net wrote:

> Hi everyone,
>
> A few years back, with several friends and my spouse, I got to
> create a lifetime memory by riding a motorcycle 9,000 miles across
> Canada and back across the US (close to 50 mpg on the bikes, so I
> didn't feel too awfully guilty) taking a pretty circuitous route and
> stopping at a lot of notable places along the way. One of the
> highlights of that trip was a large and impressive (and unknown
> previously to me at the time) dinosaur fossil museum in the middle
> of Alberta. Turns out one of the largest dinosaur fossil
> concentrations in the world - along with tons of tropical and warm
> temperate vegetation and other wet-and-warm critter fossils - is
> there. The location is quite a few degrees of latitude north of
> Seattle, and Alberta in the winter today (even with global warming)
> is downright frigid. Maybe I missed a wing of the museum exhibit,
> but I don't recall any human fossil specimens in with the mix. Hard
> to imagine how it could possibly have been so dang warm up there -
> ok, hot, actually - back then without us hominids around to make it
> so.
>
> The other unique experience we had in that area on the same trip was
> a grasshopper infestation of truly biblical proportions (try some
> roads so slippery from squished grasshoppers that they were closed
> because cars were skidding out of control, and motorcycle shift
> levers that jammed because they were cemented shut with the remnants
> of unlucky 'hoppers). We were waiting for the large flocks of gulls
> to show up and rescue the area, but the farmers there weren't as
> lucky as the folks in Salt Lake (for those who may not know, the
> speculation is that the gulls that saved the Mormon settlers
> probably came from the large resident breeding population of
> California Gulls at Mono Lake). The rest of the way riding east
> across Canada we saw truckload after truckload of hay being brought
> in from the eastern provinces to try to save at least some of the
> farm animals in the affected part of Alberta.
>
> Suffice it to say that we wound up with a unique impression of that
> particular province.
>
>
> John Tubbs
> Snoqualmie, WA
> johntubbs at comcast.net
>
>
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