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Oregon Condor
by Ted Fremd

Could the largest condor-like bird ever discovered come from the John Day basin?

Our research team is collecting interesting new fossils in the badlands these days. Some of the most remarkable things, though, were collected before any of us were born. Many of these fossils were unrecognized as important when they were collected, so they were stored, and have just been collecting dust - until someone happens to re-discover them. An example:

Almost 100 years ago, the first expedition to the John Day from the University of California at Berkeley was started during the hottest part of the summer. A small but hard working crew of students, under the direction of Professor J. C. Merriam, travelled through the area. One of the first areas they stopped was near present-day Painted Hills, where they realized this is no place for the clumsy:

June 6, 1899 Bridge Creek Beds
"After lunch Mr. Hatch and I crossed the creek to the beds further up. Some fine exposures were examined but no trace of remains. The over topping lava contains much tufa which scales off and slides down over the sedimentary strata covering it with sharp edged fragments . . . slipping once I cut the knuckles of my glove to shreds, severely skinning two fingers."

The party struggled with their wagons over the pass, needing "helper" teams, to reach the Sheep Rock area.

"Up and up and above the valley, above the fossil beds into the lava terraces among the junipers. (They are) beautiful old trees, rugged and grizzly sentinels around the walls; they keep their everlasting watch over the remains of those animals of another world that have lain buried while generation after generation of these old prophets, each perhaps a thousand years, has sprung up and passed away at the post of their duty. Time is lost and years are but the pulse beat."

They were most impressed with their first view of Turtle Cove, near present-day Blue Basin:

June 19, 1899 Turtle Cove
"The view of the large bed is a most wonderful sight. The cliffs are not less than 400 ft. high from top to floor. Cut and furrowed into chasms and pinnacles bare as a tombstone. The first impressions I received was that of Dante's illustrations of the inferno. To heighten the impression some of the strata are of a dull dirty green color most repulsive in tone. What a place for bones of ancient monsters of a long passed age."

They collected dozens of good fossils and carted them off in wagons. Today these specimens are available for study at the new Life Sciences Building, on the campus in Berkeley. There, under the watchful eye of a mounted skeleton of Tyrannosaurus rex, qualified investigators are issued a clip-on pass and guided through locked doors into the collections. It is an odd feeling to enter a high security area, and examine cabinets filled with specimens from our John Day valley, collected decades ago by men long dead. There are many items in storage that are new to science and have never been described, although in many cases precise data are missing about where the fossils came from.

On one of my last visits to these collections, I opened a drawer and saw an odd-shaped bone that was catalogued as "an unidentified mammal". It was obviously what we would call the proximal end of a humerus (that is, the shoulder-end of an upper arm bone), but unlike any I had ever seen on any mammal, living or extinct. I removed the 30 million-year-old fossil from its tray and noted it looked more like it was from some sort of large bird; completely unknown in rocks from this particular place and age. The item was brought in to the curator and discussed with him. Then we took advantage of one of the nice things about an institution like the University of California: nearby, there is a great collection of reference skeletons, arranged by element, where one can compare any bones from almost any kind of animal - such as comparing the "fingers" of a porpoise to those of a cow, and so forth. When we opened the case full of hundreds of "arm bones" from different species of animals, it was obvious that our weird fossil bone was comparable only to those from very large soaring birds, like vultures or condors - except this one was even larger. This new animal possibly resembled a California condor - but even bigger - and is probably new to science.

The collector was probably disappointed with this fossil, thinking it was just another piece of some common mammal. There are no field notes with the specimen, but he may have even considered just leaving it in the badlands; it doesn't look like much. He didn't know that what he had found may represent one of the biggest soaring birds to have ever lived.


The FOSSIL RECORD is a monthly column written by the paleontologist at John Day Fossil Beds for local newspapers in Eastern Oregon...


fossil-record/5.htm
Publication Date: 5/16/1996