I was reading about the coprolite mining industry in England in the late
19th century and was amazed by the shear volume of coprolites unearthed
there. Although not all of these nodules where necessarily fossilized
excreta it still got me thinking about the volume of faeces in the
fossil record. Does anyone know of any estimate of volume of coprolites
versus preserved organismal remains or have any general impressions of
how common fecal material is versus other fossils? One location that
came to my mind is the Green River formation. It seems to be loaded
with fish pellets that I imagine might account for many time the mass of
the preserved fish themselves. The reason I am interested is that it
struck me that in the YEC model one would predict that coprolites should
be less common than other fossils (how many time can the animals taken
up by the flood poop in a few days?) especially considering faeces could
have been easily dissolved in a flood while the YEC model considers
animals to have been well preserved.
Joel
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Dr. R. Joel Duff, Associate Chair
Associate Professor of Biology
185 ASEC, Department of Biology
University of Akron
Akron OH 44325-3908
rjduff@uakron.edu
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Received on Tue Jan 9 11:45:04 2007
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Tue Jan 09 2007 - 11:45:04 EST