Near Cañon City, Colorado
Art by AI. |
The sun burns in a blue, cloudless sky over bone beds.
Everything is quiet in the heat of Garden Park. A coyote darts by,
following a scent like a moth to light.
following a scent like a moth to light.
Dinosaurs once roamed here in ancient marshlands.
In Late Jurassic times, a long-necked Camarasaurus and Diplodocus
reached up high in trees for sweet Mesozoic greenery to eat.
A Stegosaurus tried to move, mired in mud;
a Ceratosaurus looked at her nested eggs and sniffed the humid air.
Fossil hunters and scientists have dug here since 1877,
among the hills and cliffs along the Fourmile Creek Canyon.
Cope and Marsh1 staged part of their Bone Wars here,
where their rivalry played out at a heated pace.
Today, picks strike rock layers and shovels dig down through deep time
into thick Morrison mudstone to where buried bones of dinosaurs rested for millions of years.
Brushes clean, sifters shake, measurements and photos taken, and flies swatted—
a tooth of the ferocious Allosaurus pops up, then fossils of turtles and crocodiles.
More bones, and then a flurry of discovery, wonder, and excitement.
While standing on the brink of time, I peer into the past and learn
some secrets of Earth’s ancient times.
As the sun dips down, the day’s digging ends.
While listening to the twilight, I let the milkweed fall
from my hand to follow the breeze.
Watching the evening end and the wind tease the tips of grass,
I think about these fossils and wonder what creatures,
in a distant future, will look at our fossil remains.
What will they make of us?
By Steven Wade Veatch
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1 Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh, were preeminent paleontologists who battled each other for dominance in the world of 19th century paleontology.
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