Over at Fossils In Millard County, Utah I've upload my latest paleontology-related page. Includes detailed text, plus photographs of fossils and on-site images, as well.
It's all about visits to two world-famous early Paleozoic fossil localities in western Utah: (1) Wheeler Amphitheater (or, Antelope Spring as many fossil aficionados prefer to refer to the rich region), where the middle Cambrian Wheeler Shale produces numerous perfect Elrathia kingii, Asaphiscus wheeleri, and Peronopsis interstricta trilobites; and (2) Fossil Mountain, where the lower Ordovician Pogonip Group yields perhaps the most diverse and abundant early Ordovician fauna in North America--preserves many species of brachiopods, ostracods, gastropods, cephalopods, pelecypods, echinoderms, trilobites, bryozoans, conodonts, graptolites, and sponges.
It's all about visits to two world-famous early Paleozoic fossil localities in western Utah: (1) Wheeler Amphitheater (or, Antelope Spring as many fossil aficionados prefer to refer to the rich region), where the middle Cambrian Wheeler Shale produces numerous perfect Elrathia kingii, Asaphiscus wheeleri, and Peronopsis interstricta trilobites; and (2) Fossil Mountain, where the lower Ordovician Pogonip Group yields perhaps the most diverse and abundant early Ordovician fauna in North America--preserves many species of brachiopods, ostracods, gastropods, cephalopods, pelecypods, echinoderms, trilobites, bryozoans, conodonts, graptolites, and sponges.