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Moab is very close to home, and is was one of the most fun stops. We needed a pool to cool of in after the hike in Rabbit Valley, and at night dad discovered a toad that we played with for a while. We went on two hikes in Moab. The Mill Canyon Dinosaur Trail was a lot like the Rabbit Valley Trail Through Time in Colorado, except the trail was much shorter, there were more fossils and they were easier to identify. There were many places, though, where vandals had removed the fossils, so all that was left was the shape in the surrounding rock. That's really too bad that people would take away from the public like that. It was fun, though. The Mill Canyon trail is not marked from the main road. Just a few hundred feet north from mile market 141 on HWY 191 out of Moab is the trail, on the west side of the road. It is a two mile bladed road to the trail, with a couple of forks. (Take the first left, then a right.) Or, check with the visitors center before-hand for a map and guide. Do you know where to look for a Dinosaur? (See below for additional resources you can buy online)
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When we arrived at the site, we noticed that someone else had tried to make a cast. They had used plaster, and there was a mess left all around. There was some hardened plaster in the track, and there was some plaster discarded in the rocks around. It was really sad to see this. We had to clean up the track and prepare it for our cast, including carefully chipping out some of the plaster. |
Dino
Crossword puzzle!Click on this picture for a full size crossword puzzle that you can print and search. There are pictures and names of many dinosaurs that you can find. |
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We knew not to use plaster directly in the track. We brought some alginate that Grandpa provided. Alginate is the stuff that dentists and orthodontists use to make a mold of teeth. It is made from kelp. It is very soft, and when it dries out it turns into a powder again. Alginate would not hurt the track at all, and would not leave a trace after we left. |
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The alginate got too lumpy, and didn't mix well. Maybe the water was too warm? Maybe I was trying to mix too much at once? I had to use my hands to try to mix it up, but it didn't look good. |
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We thought we'd try it anyway, so I poured the alginate into the track. We knew it would be a mess, so Susan and Harrison went back to the LV to get some more water. |
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The alginate is supposed to set-up in just a few minutes. After 20 minutes, it was still wet and lumpy. We had to dig it all out, and clean up the site. We were determined to leave it cleaner than how we found it, so it took a lot of work. |
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Here is a picture of the cleaned up track. It looks pretty good, and definitely better that when we got there. But still, we were thinking about the how it looked before, and how easy it is for someone to ruin a treasure like this. Maybe it wasn't such a good idea to make a cast? But we did learn a secret for taking great pictures of tracks. WATER! After the cleanup, the track looked really good. I took my water bottle and "painted" the remaining tracks with some water. They jumped out of the rock and were very easy to see. The result is the picture at the top of this section, with easily visible tracks. With this trick, we learned how another way to keep the wise phrase, "Take only pictures, leave only footprints." |
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Everybody loves Bill Nye, the coolest kid-friendly scientist around. This is a fun-filled dinosaur video. |
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