This is Mazon Monday post #61. What's your favorite Mazon Creek fossil? Tell us at email:[email protected].
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We are very excited to post the video of Peter Kruty's presentation for the May 2021 Paleontology Meeting. The title of his talk was "A historical Perspective on Collecting Mazon Creek and Pit 11". It was a very interesting presentation which was sure to bring back memories for long-time Mazon Creek collectors and instill a deep longing and heartfelt regret for those that couldn't or didn't participate in the glory years of the 1950's to the early 1980's.
Peter showed many photos of he and his family collecting at three different historic Mazon Creek localities. The first was a stretch of the Mazon River just east of Morris, which passes between the Kodat and Bensen farms. This was the original Mazon Creek collecting spot, active all the way back to the 1850's. The locality was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1997.
Secondly, the Greer School sat on what was Peabody Coal's Pit #1 and was known for incredible plant fossils. The school trained construction workers to drive heavy equipment. The site now hosts Cinder Ridge Golf Course in Wilmington, IL. The last site was Peabody Coal's Pit #11, which is now a State Park - Mazonia. The public is still allowed to collect in the park, however
it is overgrown with plants and concretions can be very difficult to find.
At the end of his presentation, Peter showed some stunning fossil specimens, including a Tully Monster, a very nice shrimp, some gorgeous ferns, and an incredible Elonichthys fish, which was featured in Fossil Friday #46.
Peter and his brother Paul donated parts of his father's fossil collection to ESCONI earlier this year. His father, Sam Kruty, a Chemical Engineer by profession, was an enthusiastic fossil collector, who contributed specimens to the Field Museum and the Mazon Creek Project. He was generous with his fossils using them to educate many that he met. Additionally, he was co-author of three chapters of the Richardson's Guide to the Fossil Fauna of Mazon Creek.
Thanks again, Peter and Paul!