The sagebrush and cacti-dotted landscape at Zion does not easily render thoughts of lakes, streams, and swamps. During Chinle time, no flowering plants existed; instead, club mosses and ferns grew in freshwater marshes, while horsetails and cycads occupied floodplains. The Chinle Formation's 220 million-year old ecosystem featured conifers, related to modern araucarians like the ornamental Norfolk Pine, which grew to 150 feet with 9-foot widths.
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Bone fragments and teeth belonging to phytosaurs and the early amphibian Metoposaurus have been recovered from the Chinle Formation in Zion. The phytosaur partial fossil shown here includes the occipital condyle, a part of the braincase which articulated with the upper vertebra.
The museum collection also houses armor plates, called scutes, from the primitive Aetosaurus. Other evidence of ancient life found in the Chinle includes burrows of invertebrates and coprolites (fossilized poop). And after years of uncertainty, the source of a small, mystery tooth has been solved.
Learn more about the Chinle Formation
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Last updated: July 6, 2015