Fossils of Illinois – part 2

Ocean habitats, including the shallow seas that covered the Midwest during the Cambrian Period, have given us many fossils.  The following species are all found in Illinois fossil records, and all have forms still alive today.  Bryozoans live in colonies with lacy, branching, or screw-shaped skeletons peppered with many tiny holes in which the animals reside.  Brachiopods attach to any surface by a fleshy appendage extended from their hard shells and were abundant in ages past compared to present day.  Snails are plentiful in the fossil records along the banks of all major rivers.  Cephalopods including squid, octopus, and cuttlefish, were shelled animals in their ancient forms.  They could grow to nineteen feet, but all of the shelled forms are now extinct.  Pelecypods, also known as bivalves, include mussels, clams, oysters, and scallops, and are found in the oldest rocks in the Midwest.

Perca obtusa at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Fossil Cephalopod, Placenticeras placenta, Texas at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Priscacara liops at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023

Insect fossils are rare, although more than 100 species have been found from the Pennsylvanian period in coal deposits of Illinois.  Many species lived in swampy areas at the edge of ancient seas.  Most fossils, often found in ironstone, a sedimentary rock, are of now extinct species.  Some of these species include assassin bugs, katydids, millipedes, and centipedes.  One such extinct insect was the giant millipede, Arthropleura, estimated to be eight-and-a-half feet in length.  Dragonflies, damselflies, and cockroaches in both ancient and present-day forms have been identified. 

Fossil Crab Carapace, Zanthopsis vulgaris, Pittsburgh Bluffs Formation, Oregon at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Fossil Nautilus at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Icthyosaur Stenopterygius Quadriscisius at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023

Vertebrate fossils found in the Illinois region from extinct species are mammoths and mastodons, plus animals still commonly occurring today including horses, deer, and humans.  Smaller species of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals are all present in the fossil record of the Midwest.  As you move further west, larger species from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic ages become common finds.  These include dinosaurs, camels, and saber-toothed tigers.

Pennsylvanian Period stump, possible Sigillaria at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Pecopteris miltoni, Mazon Creek, IL at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Tree bark fossil, Mazon Creek, IL at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023

Plant species found in the fossil record are abundant.  Many fast growing fern and tree species litter the coal deposits brought up from strip mining in Illinois.  Giant scouring rushes and seed ferns, now all extinct, are relatives of today’s horsetail plants.  Many of these were common ferns in ancient times and grew to heights of fifty feet or more.

Tully Monster, Tullimonstrum gregarium, at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023
Tully Monster, Tullimonstrum gregarium, at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023

The Tully Monster, Tullimonstrum gregarium, was named the Illinois state fossil in 1989.  It was a soft-bodied animal that lived during the Pennsylvanian Period, 300 to 315 million years ago.  With a smooth, tapered body and large tail fins, it had an oval, segmented body that grew to about 12″ in length, and was at home in the shallow, tropical seas that covered this area.  The first fossil was found in 1958, and no specimen of this animal has ever been found outside of Illinois.

You can view and study the Tully Monster and other fossil specimens at the Jurica-Suchy Nature Museum, and many other representative specimens can be viewed in most natural history museums.  While fossils have been well-studied over the past several decades, there are many facets of each specimen and the environments and habitats they lived in still to be discovered.

Gallery of fossils from upper left clockwise: Fossil variety at JSNM; Nothosaurus vertebra, Rudersdorf, Germany at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023; Fossil variety at JSNM; Pterosaur phyllurus ramphrhynicus, Jurassic period, at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023; Ptychocarpus unitus, Mazon Creek, IL at JSNM by DonArnold, Oct 2023; Fossil variety at JSNM;



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Author: Don

Hi, I'm Don, a woodland steward, certified burn boss, University of Illinois Extension Master Naturalist, and Certified Interpretive Guide. I enjoy hiking, nature photography, wildlife observation, and model railroading

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