Hi, Doug,

    The article Ron cited was a newspaper article.  It contains what the 
reporter
understood and could remember and we all, sadly, know how that goes!  It's only 
a little
muddled, but I was impressed that the news in Springfield, Missouri, did so 
relatively
well.
    You'd have to know Springfield, Missouri to appreciate that, in the 
"cultural capitol"
of the Ozarks.  I can be snide about the Mountain William ethnicity, being one 
myself, down
to the missing tooth, but nobody else better.
    Go to the link:
<http://geosciences.smsu.edu/faculty/Evans/impacts.htm>
    If you move around through Evans' site, you'll see all the geological 
evidence nicely
presented.  He is the guy who has done the drilling and investigation that 
brought
attention (and proof of shocked quartz) to the impact site and why this 
conference was
there in the deep Missouri boonies.
    As for the crinoid crowd, my old house, being elevated far above street 
level, has a
winding walk and stairway up to the door that was made from slabs from the 
local quarry
here on the Mississippi River's edge, hauled home by the two and threes by my 
father in our
old Ford in 1939.
    These stones didn't just have fossils in them -- they are solid fossil, a 
carpet of
crinoids and all their former neighbors in the Ordovician seas of the Mid-West. 
 I think
there may be some Devonian interlopers in there too.
    They were my geology text as a child and I spend many long summer hours 
crawling up and
down the steps with my nose to the crinoids and other assorted critters.
    This course of study climaxed at the age of six when I took a small sledge 
hammer and
masonry chisel to the steps and removed a large and perfect Dinorthis from 
them, much to
the displeasure of my parent!
    He was wise enough to take me to the quarry's trash pile and let me select 
a few
boxfuls of the most fossiliferous fragments to take home and disassemble if I 
promised to
leave the steps alone, which I did, so my crinoid walkway is still intact.

Sterling K. Webb
-----------------------------------------------
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Sterling & Ron commented::
>
> > If a  meteorite created the structure, it hit some 300 million years ago
> > when  mid-Missouri was part of an ancient Jurassic Age sea. The strike
> >  obliterated plant-like crinoids, Koeberl said.
>
> Ancient Jurassic Sea 300 million years ago?  ???????  I don't  think so...So,
> what does the crinoidal limestone (Burlington Limestone) look  like
> there...did it "obliterate" FOSSILIZED REMAINS or the CRINOID ANIMALS  
> THEMSELVES...any
> more info on this comment?  Is it an assumption or based  on some observation
> of some crinoids...I thought their age was ~345 million  years old in that
> locality...but the article mentions a strike 300 million years  old...and the
> article refers to a Jurassic age...Jurassic is only 136-190  million years old
> (in the Mesozoic), so the article seems to have left an  ambiguous
> chronostratigraphy- and that limestone is from the Paleozoic  Mississipian, or
> pennsylvanian, I think...I hope someone could elucidate a bit  on 
> this...Also, crinoids
> are animals stuck with"plant-like" and the misnomer  "Sea Lilies", but look a
> lot more like brittlestars, the feathery starfish in  many parts of the world,
> just they frequently had long stems in prior ages that  now look like stacks
> of coins when found fossilized.
> Saludos, Doug


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