Identification Guide
to the Fossils of
Guadalupe Mountains
National Park
Mary Carol Coleman and Cameron Coleman
PREFACE
This Identification Guide to the Fossils of the Guadalupe
Mountains has been compiled in the hope that it will help visitors
gain a greater appreciation and understanding of the mountains as
they are today and of the sea, plants, and animals that formed them
so many millions of years ago.
We hope that the increased knowledge this volume can provide
will lead to an enhanced reverence for and protection of this unique
and fragile resource.
This guide is not intended to be comprehensive, but includes the
fossils that would most frequently be found.
WHY STUDY THE ROCKS?
Scientists dont just study the rocks and their fossils to learn about
ancient life and long-passed environments. For decades the rocks
and fossils of the Guadalupe Mountains and Delaware Mountains
to the south have been studied by geologists in an attempt to better
understand how petroleum deposits were formed and how to tap
into those deposits. The extensive oil fields of the west Texas
Permian Basin were developed primarily by applying what was
learned from these studies. Petroleum deposits have and are being
found today in many other regions of the world because of geology
lessons learned here.
PROTECTION OF THE FOSSILS
The Guadalupe Mountains are a world-class example of a
marine reef of the Permian period. Our study of the fossils here
is an attempt to step back into a time that will always partially
remain a mystery to us. Most of the plants and animals that have
turned into rock are long since extinct. We can never know the
reef as it was when it was filled with living creatures, bathed in
ancient seawater. However, by painstaking, prolonged study of the
rocks that remain, some of the secrets of the life of the reef and the
surrounding sea are being revealed to us.
The fossils that are here have meaning only in the context of the
land from which they came. We ask that you respect and care for
the fossils by leaving them where you find them. Every fossil or
rock that is illegally removed from the Park is a potential loss of
a piece of the puzzle. Penalties for removal of or damage to any
rocks in the park can include fines of up to $5000 and six months
in jail. Damage includes scratching names or dates or pounding
with other rocks.
Please report anyone damaging or removing fossils to park
rangers.
GEOLOGIC HISTORY
The Guadalupe Mountains originated as a marine reef in the
Permian Period 280 to 250 million years ago. Most of the earths
land mass at that time was united in the supercontinent of Pangaea
(meaning all lands). What is now western Texas lay near the
western edge of Pangaea and was at the time about 5 degrees north
of the equator. The collision of the continents during the formation
of Pangaea had caused a large area to warp downward to form the
Permian Basin and seawater had filled this basin. The marine reef
grew along the edges of a portion of this seaway that we today call
the Delaware Sea. Over millions of years the reef became a mas-
sive structure about 400 miles in length, completely encircling the
edges of the deep Delaware Basin.
The reef was formed by many organisms that are extinct today,
even though most do have living relatives. Unlike modern reefs
which are composed primarily of colonial corals, the predominant
organisms of the Capitan Reef were many different kinds of spong-
es. Numerous species of algae, bryozoans, cephalopods, crinoids,
trilobites, brachiopods, horn corals, and fusulinids also lived on
this reef. As these organisms died, they left a skeletal framework,
cemented together by algae, on which their successors could con-
tinue to grow. The reef thus gradually built upward and outward
into the deep basin, being further hardened by the precipitation of
calcium carbonate from seawater.
Over time, waves washed billions of organisms off the surface
of the reef and unstable sections of the reef broke off. These large
and small fragments slid down the reef front, forming a slope
below the reef called the forereef. The reef also grew high enough
to block free flow of seawater behind it, so a shallow lagoon was
formed that stretched for ten miles between the reef and the shore.
High evaporation rates in this equatorial climate caused minerals in
the waters of the lagoon to become concentrated and deposit layers
of rock called dolomite.
Toward the end of the Permian Period, the Delaware Sea be-
gan to dry up, the reef died, and the basin filled in with salts and
sediments. The dead reef was buried, and the plants and animals
that had lived and died there over millions of years were encased
and turned into rock, as well as deposits of petroleum. Soon after,
some form of cataclysmic event caused the Permian Extinction,
in which 95% of all life on earth perished. Many of the types of
organisms that had built the reef became extinct.
About six million years ago, shifts in the earths crust along
fault lines caused the long-buried reef to be lifted upward to its
present position. Exposed to weather, the salts and softer sedi-
ments were washed away, leaving the ancient reef towering over
the basin floor. During the last Ice Age, large amounts of rushing
water carved canyons through the reef, revealing it in cross-section
and shaping the Guadalupe Mountains as we know them today.
Algae
Fossil identification
Looks like thin, multiple, uniform layers; may be straight,
tightly curved, or stacked
May surround another organism
Sometimes looks like a sliced cabbage head
Found in reef or forereef, on sides of canyons or
Southeast escarpment
Biological Data
Belong to a very large group of simple plants lacking
roots, stems, and leaves
Blue-green algae probably ancestral to all higher plants
Includes seaweeds
About a dozen types of algal fossils identified in the
Guadalupes
All genera found here now extinct
Algae
algae - Archaeolithoporella
algae - Collenella
Algae
algae - Archaeolithoporella
algae - Archaeolithoporella
Ammonoids
Fossil Identification
Coiled in one plane with internal chambers
Chamber partitions are wavy or complicated
Sometimes hard to distinguish from a nautiloid if the
partitions are not readily visible
Internal canal present but not easily visible
Found in many places, but always uncommon
Biological Data
Survived the Permian Extinction but became extinct
along with the dinosaurs 65 million years ago
Were a type of cephalopod, related to squids and octopi
Had a chambered shell, into which they pumped gas to
rise or descend in the water
Tentacles seized prey and held it to jaws
Important in identifying the age of rocks worldwide
Exterior - without visible partitions
10
Ammonoids
Interior - with partitions
Interior - with partitions and furrows 11
Ammonoids
vertical cross section
12
Lurking Ammonoid - partially obscured by rock
Ammonoids
horizontal cross section
13
Nautiloids
Fossil Identification
Coiled in one plane with internal chambers
Chamber partitions gently curved; not wavy
Partitions relatively close together
Sides may be smooth or with regularly placed bumps
Internal canal often present and located more centrally
that in ammonoids
Found mainly in reef just below crests of ridgelines and
canyon walls
Biological Data
Still represented today in the Chambered Nautilus
Soft anatomy similar to ammonoids
External mold showing bumps and preserving a portion of the body
cavity (right) 14
Nautiloids
Vertical cross section showing interior partitions and open chambers
partial cross section showing open chambers, filled chambers, and
15
internal canal (marked with arrow)
Nautiloids
horizontal cross section - note central position of canal (marked with
arrow)
cross section - with canal (marked by arrow) 16
gastropods
Fossil Identification
Coiled snail
Lacks cross chambers of ammonoid and nautiloid
Coiling often in more than one plane
Biological Data
Still exist today as snails, whelks, and conchs
Is a mollusc with a head, a foot, and a coiled shell
Branch of ancestral form probably evolved into nautiloids
Feed by grazing on algae, decaying organisms, or
bacterial slime
cross section - note lack of chambers/partitions 17
gastropods
Original color stripes preserved 18
gastropods
cross section - no chambers/partitions
vertical cross section 19
Brachiopods
Fossil Identification
Bivalve; bilaterally symmetrical
Often with strong, radiating ridges
Common
Can occur in large clusters
Found mainly on the mountain flanks, or in the foothills;
can often be found in washes
Biological Data
Have living representatives living in oceans
All but one group died out during Permian Extinction
Attach to substrate by stout muscular stalk at posterior
end
Feed by action of cilia sweeping minute organisms into
mouth
Sometimes found in large clusters
20
Brachiopods
Collemataria - Dead Mens Chests
21
Brachiopods
22
Brachiopods
A cluster of several kinds of brachiopods; all partially exposed
a bed of brachiopods 23
pelecypods
Fossil Identification
Bivalve; not bilaterally symmetrical
An example an oyster or typical beach shells
Not common; but when found occur mostly in reef and
shelf rocks directly above reef high on canyon and
escarpment slopes
Biological Data
Modern-day representatives are clams, oysters, and
scallops
Most burrow in sand or mud using fleshy foot
Few attach to substrate like mussels
Feed by filtering microorganisms out of water or mud
an oyster type - very rare 24
pelecypods
an ark type
burrowing clam 25
bryozoans
Biological Data
Have living representatives living in oceans
Colonial animals form structures containing thousands of
identical individuals
Each individual lives in separate protective case
Colony grows by budding
May appear plant-like or net-like
Ciliated tentacles emerge from opening to sweep water
into mouth, filtering out
microorganisms
26
bryozoans Encrusting
Fossil Identification
Lots of small, closely packed regular tubes surrounding
another organism
Bryozoan completely surrounding a sponge (Colospongia)
27
bryozoans Encrusting
Bryozoan encrusting top of branched sponge
Bryozoan encrusting granular material 28
bryozoans Fenestrate
Fossil Identification
Net-like appearance; small, regular chambers
Can spread out and appear fan-like or funnel shaped
29
bryozoans Fenestrate
30
bryozoans Ramose
Fossil Identification
Looks like lots of small radiating tubes
red arrow points to a Colospongia; yellow arrow indicates the bryozoan
31
bryozoans Stick-shaped
Fossil Identification
looks like a spiny stick
red arrow points to sponge; yellow arrow indicates Bryozoan
32
Corals Horn corals
Fossil Identification
Single animal; not colonial
Appears as numerous blades or plates that radiate
outward from central area which may be open or filled
Blades get thicker as they approach outer walls
Small plates may connect the blades
Exterior may show numerous parallel lines
Horizontal central chambers may be present
Cross section can be to 1 inch
Biological Data
Died out during Permian Extinction
A coelenterate, distantly related to modern corals and
jellyfish
Anchored itself to sea floor or substrate
Algae in tissues secrete hard protective horn-shaped
skeleton
33
Corals Horn corals
cross section
34
Corals Horn corals
cross section 35
Corals Tabulate
Fossil Identification
Looks like small wasp nest; to diameter; spherical
shape
Cells are approximately 1/8 across; larger than bryozoan
cells (bryozoan cells are smaller and more uniform in size
and position)
Cells may be covered with flat cap and are polygonal in
shape
Colonial coral
Biological Data
Extinct
Distantly related to modern corals and jellyfish
Formed dime-sized globular colonies that attached high
on other organisms
Only colonial coral found on Capitan Reef
36
Corals Tabulate
yellow arrow points out coral; rest of rock is sponges
37
Crinoids
Fossil Identification
May occur as numerous individuals in large patch
Sectioned stem
Branching head is not usually found
Usually solid, crystalline calcite
Cross section appears amorphous in texture
Biological Data
An echinoderm, distantly related to starfish, sea urchins,
and sand dollars
Attach by stalk to substrate
Skeleton consists of close-fitted plates, each being a
single flat calcite crystal
Have rare modern representatives, inhabiting deep sea
bottoms
Have a nervous system and a one-way digestive tract
Use branched arms to filter small organisms from water
38
Crinoids
39
Crinoids
40
Echinoids
Fossil Identification
Sea urchins
Balls of plates with long spines
Biological Data
Have modern representatives in sea urchins and sand
dollars
Related to starfish and crinoids
Have long, sharp spines and close-fitted plates enclosing
soft body parts
Mouth in center of lower surface
Move with tube feet which project through holes
Graze on vegetation and dead material
yellow arrow points to body; red arrow points to spines
41
Echinoids
spine 42
fusulinids
Fossil Identification
Single cell organism covered with porous shell
Look like large grains of rice
Found in large numbers at the top of the reef; higher
elevations
Complex internal structures
Biological Data
Died out during Permian extinction
Living relatives known as Foraminifera
Single-celled protozoan which secretes a mineral shell
Pseudopods extended out through porous shell to absorb
food and provide locomotion
Millions lived on landward side of reef
43
fusulinids
44
fusulinids
45
scaphopods
Fossil Identification
Looks like a hollow tusk
Most likely found near ridge crests or in the foothills
In cross section, looks like round tubes
Biological Data
Living representatives called tusk shells
Protective shell consists of a long, tapering, hollow tube
Type of mollusc, burrowing in mud or sand using
muscular foot
Have filaments which capture prey
46
scaphopods
Yellow arrow notes scaphopod; red arrows point to attached sponge
47
sponges
Biological Data
Members of phylum Porifera, which originated 700 million
years ago
Most primitive of multicellular animals
Have bag-like bodies open at one end and attached to
substrate at the other
Water enters through minute pores by action of flagella
Nutrient material suspended in water enters specialized
cells for digestion
Water exits through main opening or several smaller
openings
Over sixty different kinds identified as part of Capitan
Reef
All genera found as fossils in Capitan Reef are now
extinct
48
sponges Amblysiphonella
Fossil Identification
Sponges can be found almost anywhere in the park,
but are most obvious in the reef high on canyon and
escarpment slopes
Looks like stacked inner tubes
Common sponge; often found with Lemonea nearby
Long tubular central canal
yellow arrow notes stacked inner tube appearance; red arrow points out
cross section with central canal
49
sponges Amblysiphonella
note stacked rings with central canal
50
sponges Amblysiphonella
group of three; weathered, showing characteristic rings 51
sponges Colospongia
Fossil Identification
Looks like stack of kidney beans
No central canal
Pores in chamber walls
Fairly uncommon
Chambers appear more expanded than an
amblysiphonella
52
sponges Colospongia
close up of above photo 53
sponges Colospongia
54
sponges Cystauletes
Fossil Identification
Elongated bubble clusters; about 3/4 or less in diameter
No central canal
Side view reveals no more than 3 rows of bubbles
Fairly common
55
sponges Cystauletes
56
sponges Discosiphonella
Fossil Identification
Elongated bubble clusters; 1 or more in diameter
Distinct central canal in cross section
Side view reveals 5 or more rows of bubbles
Fairly common
57
sponges Discosiphonella
Individual with buds 58
sponges Discosiphonella
cross section
59
sponges Gigantospongia
Fossil Identification
Found at higher elevations, near the top of the reef
Looks very spongy
Can be large and sprawling; may wrap around the rock
1/2 to 1 thick and up to 3 feet long
No central canal
60
sponges Gigantospongia
giganto bud 61
sponges Gigantospongia
more young buds 62
Sponges Girtycoelia
Fossil Identification
Single chain of balls; rarely branches
Small tubular central canal connects the balls
Relatively uncommon
Usually found as isolated individuals
Averages 2 in length
63
Sponges Guadalupia
Fossil Identification
Can spread to a broad, flat, fan-like shape
Can look like stacked bananas in cross section
Exterior looks like a broad patch of fish scales; scales
dont change shape at the edges
Was a flat sponge, as opposed to Lemonea, which was
cylindrical
No central canal
Moderately abundant
64
Sponges Guadalupia
65
Sponges Guadalupia
66
Sponges Heliospongia
Fossil Identification
Circular with discontinuous canals radiating out from
center
Small central canal
Uncommon
Up to 2 1/2 diameter
67
Sponges Heliospongia
68
Sponges Lemonea
Fossil Identification
Cone-shaped or multiple cones connected end to end
Small chambers which are tightly packed, long, slender,
and curved (like very tiny bananas)
Cross section looks like ring of radiating bananas around
central channel
Channel filled with irregular canals, not sediment
May form branched colonies
Average size: diameter; 2 to 8 length; but ranges to 1
in width to 14 in length
Most common sponge found in almost any reef elevation
69
Sponges Lemonea
70
Sponges Lemonea
cross section
red arrows note scratch mark defacement 71
Sponges Race Cars
Fossil Identification
Grew near the top of the reef probably in the surf
Some have corrugated surface appearance
Tend to be large and bulky; 2 inches or more thick, and
very broad
Uncommon
Found at higher elevations
72
Sponges Race Cars
73
Sponges Race Cars
74
Sponges Rhabdactinia
Fossil Identification
Relatively rare
Fan-shaped with numerous canals running upwards from
base of fan
Narrow stacked rings of increasing diameter
If one is found in an area, there may be others nearby
75
Sponges Rhabdactinia
76
Sponges Rhabdactinia
77
Sponges Sheiia
Fossil Identification
Circular with continuous, very straight, radiating canals
Very small central canal
Rare
78
Sponges Sollasia
Fossil Identification
Chain of small spheres
No tubular central canal
Uncommon
79
Sponges Sollasia
80
Sponges Sollasiella
Fossil Identification
Looks like Sollasia, but smaller and chambers are more
oval
81
82
Sponges Unidentified
83
Sponges Unidentified
earthworm sponge - cross section of a plate-like sponge
branching type 84
Sponges Unidentified
cross section
a spongy sponge 85
Sponges Unidentified
vase sponges in cross section
vase sponges in cross section 86
Sponges Unidentified
vase sponge in cross section
vase sponges - arrow indicates individual in vertical section 87
Sponges Unidentified
Vertical section of branching vase sponge
88
trilobites
Fossil Identification
Rarely found here; if found, note location
Segmented arthropod
Biological Data
Type of arthropod with no living descendants
Lived 600-250 million years ago, ending at Permian Ex-
tinction
Segmented bodies, each segment with two pairs of limbs
for walking, swimming, breathing, and handling food
Predator ranging widely across reef and capturing small
prey by stirring up sediment
Earliest known animal with efficient eyes
Horseshoe crab probably distantly related
89
trilobites
Trilobite tail - weathered almost to cross section 90
1
inches
2