Paleonet: Call for papers — Pennsylvanian ichnology
David Kopaska-Merkel
davidkm at gsa.state.al.us
Thu Oct 19 16:33:36 UTC 2017
Alabama Paleontological Society Monograph No. 2
Pennsylvanian Footprints in the Black Warrior Basin of Alabama.
Vol. 2: The Ichnology of Multiple Walker County Tracksites
A CALL FOR PAPERS
In 2005, the Alabama Paleontological Society (APS) published a comprehensive monograph on the trace and body fossils of the world’s most prolific Carboniferous (Coal Age) tracksite, the Union Chapel Mine (now the Steven C. Minkin Paleozoic Footprint site) located in north-central Alabama. More than 2500 specimens of trackways have been collected from this site, a discontinued surface coal mine in Walker County.
APS Monograph No. 1, Pennsylvanian Footprints in the Black Warrior Basin of Alabama, known informally as the “Blue Book,” was a citizen scientist-professional collaboration that stood as the first major attempt to research Coal Age vertebrate trackways in Alabama since Museum Paper No. 9, Footprints from the Coal Measures of Alabama, published in 1930 by the Alabama Museum of Natural History and written by Truman H. Aldrich, Sr. and Walter B. Jones. The entire Blue Book can be accessed online at
kudzu.astr.ua.edu/monograph/monofiles/monofiles.html<file:///T:\ProjectsAndPrograms\PALEO%20PROGRAM\minkin%20site\APS%20Mono%202\kudzu.astr.ua.edu\monograph\monofiles\monofiles.html>
Although the Blue Book is still of great value, it was not long before its interpretations needed to be revised and updated. For example, the taxonomy and attribution of vertebrate trackways is still in flux, while some “horseshoe crab” trackways are now thought to have been made by wingless monuran insects. Other traces in the Blue Book are still being debated and likely need further work. But in addition, many more specimens have been collected from Walker County since 2005 that have not yet been examined by any professional ichnologist. An example is the large database of new material from the Crescent Valley Mine near Carbon Hill, 23 miles west and a little north of the Minkin Site. Other sites include the Sugartown and Fern Springs Road mines, which have been visited many times by APS members.
We are calling for papers to be part of a second monograph prepared under the auspices of the APS to accomplish the following:
· illustrate new and interesting specimens collected from multiple tracksites since 2005
· arrange for thorough expert examination of the new vertebrate and invertebrate trace fossil specimens, treating both kinds as having the same level of scientific value
· revise the interpretations in the Blue Book accordingly
· cover all the known tracksites in Alabama
· include analysis and illustration of important specimens of plant fossils found at
these same sites
· provide a global view of life during the coal age in Alabama, with the idea of connecting the Alabama tracks to other sites in the US and Canada
· provide a venue for several new studies of UCM and CVM material that are already underway or planned
EDITORS:
Dr. Ronald J. Buta, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, rbuta at ua.edu<mailto:rbuta at ua.edu>
Dr. David C. Kopaska-Merkel, Geological Survey of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, davidkm at gsa.state.al.us
Dr. Andrew K. Rindsberg, University of West Alabama, Livingston, arindsberg at uwa.edu
We encourage scientists with a strong interest and experience in Carboniferous trace fossils to contribute papers to this volume. A significant number of Walker County trace fossils collected by local amateurs and citizen scientists are housed in museums in Alabama, including the Alabama Museum of Natural History, the McWane Science Center, and the Anniston Museum of Natural History. The database has continued to expand since the first “Track Meet” (gathering of collectors to document and often donate their specimens) held nearly 17 years ago at the Alabama Museum of Natural History. The story behind the discovery and re-discovery of vertebrate trace fossils in Alabama is told in “Footprints in Stone: Fossil Traces of Coal-Age Tetrapods,” by Ronald J. Buta and David C. Kopaska-Merkel, published in mid-2016 by the University of Alabama Press. The book is available through both amazon.com and the UA Press.
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:
If you are interested in contributing a paper to the proposed volume, please send the editors a letter of intent indicating the topic you would like to focus on. This letter should be submitted by January 1, 2018.
If accepted by the editors as a possible paper for the volume, the formal deadline for submitting the completed manuscript is January 1, 2019. All papers should be submitted in Microsoft Word with illustrations in separate jpeg or tiff format. Line graphs should have a resolution of at least 300 dpi. Halftones should be well-focused and sharp.
David C Kopaska-Merkel
Geological Survey of Alabama
Box 869999
Tuscaloosa AL 35486-6999
205-247-3695
www.gsa.state.al.us<http://www.gsa.state.al.us>
fax 205-349-2861
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