Fossils - these have to be the draw card for many kid (and adult).
This location is however a Geological Monument - so its look, take
pictures, but no collecting!
In the 1840's a famous visiting geologist, Rev Clarke,
travelling to the local Duntroon Homestead, stopped and looked at
the outcrop of rocks in this small creek. He was astounded to find
'lamp shell' fossils (brachipods) and trilobites that he knew from
back in his native Britian. There they had been identified as
Silurian fossils - some 420 million years old. And on that day,
these became the oldest recognised fossils in Australia (since them
fossils have been found way older.....)
Back in the Silurian, Canberra was a shallow sea surrounded by
active volcanoes. The muds in these shallow seas were the home to
these brachiopods, as well as bryozoans and trilobites. When they
died, they sank into the sea floor muds and became preserved as
fossils.
Since the time the sea was filled in, mainly by volcanic
eruptions, and the rocks uplifted and folded into broad folds. This
folding has shattered the rocks, making them crumble easily, and
some people in the past have come here to collect the fossils - now
banned.
Fortunately a concerned group has had the area signposted...and
this sign contains a lot more interesting geological
information.
But heres a few more tid bits.....
The sandstone on the corners of the bridge pylons was once used
to build a former bridge before this 1950s model. The sandstone has
been transported from Sydney and is way out of place of the local
rocks making up the rest of the bridge. No photos of the old bridge
seem to exist, but who ever built it, probably the owners of
Duntroon, spent a vast sum on bringing stone from so far away.
The iron pins that stick out of the rocks here are a dilema.
Maybe they were part of the old bridge structure...or part of a
film set for the Land of the Giants...who knows?
To log your visit to this site you need to measure the size of
the lamp shell fossils you have seen (in mm. Send me by email your
answer to geoaware (through profile above)
We love to see photographs of people who visit our
EarthCaches....so please feel free to post photos....this is
optional :)