THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Center of Southwest Studies Delaney Dinosaur! Exhibit

Center of Southwest Studies Delaney Dinosaur! Exhibit

Story by Ryan Simonovich Photos by Jarred Green and Crystal Ashike

Author: Bodine, James/Monday, March 27, 2017/Categories: Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

A new exhibit featuring dinosaur fossils is on display in the Delaney Library in the Center of Southwest Studies.

Dinosaurs! was researched, curated and built as a part of a capstone project for adjunct professor of geosciences, Jon Powell’s paleontology class, Powell said.

The exhibit attempts to show what Southwest Colorado was like millions of years ago before the Ice Age, he said.

Colorado really was the jurassic park they talk about in the movies, Powell said. Most of the dinosaur fossils on display are from Colorado, he said.

The Animas Valley was carved out by a glacier, but before that Durango was under water, Powell said. There is evidence of this Cambrian period in the granite rocks near Baker’s Bridge, he said.

The exhibit then shows fossils from the Jurassic period, which is when the big dinosaurs start showing up, he said.

The display ends with the Ice Age, showing sabertooth tigers and woolly mammoths.

Dinosaurs! is not the only new display at the Center of Southwest Studies. Recent installations in the Center’s museum include Ben Nighthorse Campbell: Colorado’s Renaissance Man and Treasures of the Southwest.

Colorado's’ Renaissance Man shows furniture from Campbell’s office, Elizabeth Quinn, Collections Manager, said. Campbell is a former United States Senator from Colorado and the namesake of the Campbell Child and Family Center on campus.

Treasures of the Southwest is a textile and fine art display including textiles from the Durango Collection, Quinn said. The Durango Collection, sourced from multiple donors and donated to Fort Lewis College, features Pueblo, Navajo and Hispanic textiles, she said.

Both museum exhibits will be semi permanent, she said. The subject will continue to be about Campbell and the Durango Collection, but the topics discussed will vary.

Print

Number of views (3670)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

The personal and the political: FLC students talk their circumstances and values as they cast their vote for the 2020 presidential election

By Dorothy Elder Indy Staff Writer

This year, many Americans have their attention on the presidential election, which sits in the middle of a pandemic, a resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement and the nomination of a Supreme Court justice. With America’s increasing political polarization, those casting their votes for the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden, cannot wrap their heads around why anyone would vote to re-elect the Republican nominee, President Donald J. Trump and Trump supporters can’t see why you wouldn’t. 

This year, many Americans have their attention on the presidential election, which sits in the middle of a pandemic, a resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement and the nomination of a Supreme Court justice. With America’s increasing political polarization, those casting their votes for the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden, cannot wrap their...

Tradition TakΣover: Kappa Sigma pushes for recognition at FLC

By Will Charles Indy Staff Writer

Liam Elliot, interest group leader and sophomore at Fort Lewis College, is wanting to start a fraternity and be a part of a Kappa Sigma Chapter.

  Liam Elliot, interest group leader and sophomore at Fort Lewis College, is wanting to start a fraternity and be a part of a Kappa Sigma Chapter. Kappa Sigma Durango will begin at Interest Group level, which is when students can come to meetings and see what the chapter is all about, Booth said. Elliot’s goal is for the group to be able to colonize, a term fraternities use...

College, Quarantined

By Morgan Reed Indy Staff Writer

Can you remember being put into time-out as a child? My first week here, at Fort Lewis College, took me back to that nostalgic and harrowing feeling. 

Can you remember being put into time-out as a child? My first week here, at Fort Lewis College, took me back to that nostalgic and harrowing feeling.  I was figuring out  life on my own, far away from anyone familiar. Two days into this journey my roommate came into our place and shook things up a little more. I was in the kitchen when she answered the dreaded call alerting her of...

In a hotel down by the river: COVID-19 requires new housing accommodations at Fort Lewis College

By Barbara Edwards Indy Staff Writer and Steven Marquez

This school year has been unlike any other due to the coronavirus pandemic. One change Fort Lewis College made was housing students at the Durango Downtown Inn, in order to combat the spread of the virus.

This school year has been unlike any other due to the coronavirus pandemic. One change Fort Lewis College made was housing students at the Durango Downtown Inn, in order to combat the spread of the virus. “We felt very strongly that we wanted to provide a housing option to everyone who applied and requested housing,” James Estelle, the assistant director for the office of...

Up In Smoke: Colorado on Fire

By Jackson Zinsmeyer Indy Staff Writer

On July 31, 18 miles north of Grand Junction, Colorado, lightning struck starting what would become Colorado’s largest wildfire at 139,000 acres burnt.

On July 31, 18 miles north of Grand Junction, Colorado, lightning struck starting what would become Colorado’s largest wildfire at 139,000 acres burnt. According to the Incident Information System, Inciweb, the fire is 95% contained as of Sept. 11. Despite being nearly four hours away from Durango, this fire, as well as the many other fires in Colorado such as the Cameron Peak and...

First1617181921232425Last