Shale at Gettysburg Reveals Valuable Clues on Dinosaurs Dr. C. W. Gilmore, curator of vertebrate paleontology, is shown pointing to the footprint which is said to have been made 190,000,000 years ago. —Star Staff Photo. A 180,000,000 - year - old dinosaur pasture within a few miles of the Gettysburg battlefield has just been investigated by Smithsonian Institution paleontolo gists. Here, presumably on the mud-cov ered shore of an ancient lake, some of the earliest known of these fantastic reptiles left five-toe footprints. The mud became, in the course of millions of years, the Gettysburg shale of today. This summer rock was being quar ried for a bridge on the battlefield. The quarrymen called the attention of the footprints they uncovered to El mer R. Haile, Department of Agricul ture engineer, who recognized them as dinosaur tracks, and now is at work on a scientific description of them. Some of the choicest slabs have been deposited in the United States National f- ^ - Museum. Othen have been distributed to other paleontological museums. Dawn of Reptile Age. The footprints date from the Trias sic geological period, the beginning of the age of reptiles. Here the first creatures which can definitely be iden tified from their fossil remains as dino saurs made their appearance. They were of all sizes from a chicken to a horse. The monsters of the dinosaur race, the largest animals ever to appear on earth, were a few millions of years in the future. The tracks near Gettysburg are from a half inch to six Inches in length. ,The longest stride is approxi mately 30 inches, indicating an animal about the size of a man. The creatures were more primitive and generalized than the later dinosaurs, says Dr. Charles W. Gilmore, Smithsonian In ====== ititutlon paleontologist, but were in every respect perfect dinosaurs. Appeared Suddenly. This constitutes one of the paradoxes pf paleontology. Like man himself, he dinosaur race seems to have ap peared on earth almost fully developed. It has no know ancestry. In the Permian geological period which pre cedes the Triasslc by a few million years, only quite questionable dinosaur remains have been found. Abundant were the great amphibians, giant fore •unners of the toads and frogs of to lay. Unquestionably the dinosaurs were derived from them in some way, nit the intermediate steps are almost jompletely lost. Yet, Mr. Gilmore points out, it must have taken millions >f years of evolution to have made such a perfectly good reptile as a linosaur out of an amphibian. The Gettysburg dinosaurs seem to lave been lords of all they surveyed. Some rather amomalous footprints in he Gettysburg shale indicate that some small creatures of another reptile Family may have lived among them. No traces of vegetable life have been Found in the shale, yet it is reasonable So believe that it must have been there. n»e dinosaurs ordinarily were bipeds, walking upright on their hind legs and cerhaps roughly comparable to kanga roos. In Triasslc beds elsewhere, tracks }f the front limbs of the animals are Found only rarely. Show Traces of Claws. At Gettysburg, however, the reptiles seem to have been engaged in leisurely feeding. They often dropped fore ward so that their front feet were im pressed in the mud. Most of the front feet tracks show traces of claws. Their makers very probably were flesh eaters, perhaps grabbing their living prey from the lake shore ooze. But some show no evidence of claws. They may have been plant browsers, the forerunners of the herbage-eating dinosaurs which developed into the titans of the race. Altogether about 150 tracks have been found in the shale. Also the rock bears traces of ancient raindrops fall ing on the soft mud and many water ripple marks are found. There are also sun cracks, made when the mud became baked hard under the hot sun of 180,000,000 years ago. The area appears to have been intermittently submerged. The find constitutes an important addition to early dinosaur material. Other important Triassic sites are in the Connecticut Valley and in Loudoun County, Va„ where a porch at Oak Hill, former home of President James Monroe, is floored with slabs contain ing dinosaur tracks. ~ Welcomes Jail. CHESTER, 111., Dec. 3 (JP.—Re marking that “conditions on the out side are terrible, I’m sure glad to be back," John Ketchmark surrendered at the Southern Illinois prison yester day and told a story of wandering I. ..-■_ « since he walked away from the prison quarry in March, 1920. Warden Joseph Montgomery said Ketchmark, nor 52, must serve seven more years to complete his sentence for burglary and larceny. 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