![]() PaleoAdventures in South Dakota offers guided, full-day field trips from March through September. Photo: PALEOADVENTURES DINOSAUR DIGS/Facebook The Buffalo Museum of Science, as of 2022, has an exhibit on dinosaurs in Antarctica. Nearby Attractions: Woodlawn Beach State Park, a mile-long beach on Lake Erie, is just a short seven-minute drive away, and Niagara Falls is 40 minutes north. Where: Penn Dixie Fossil Park and Nature Reserve, 4050 North Street, Blasdell, NY 14219 There are also Dig With The Experts events every June. Staff and volunteers assist visitors, and the park is accessible to wheelchairs, with paved paths throughout. Tools are available for rental, and fossils can be kept, though the park asks to photograph particularly fascinating ones. The park is open from April to October, and there is a $14 entrance fee. When the area was quarried, layers of 380 million-year-old Devonian Period rock were uncovered, filled with brachiopods, bryozoans, corals, and (famously) trilobites. Help us keep this site up and running by visiting our online store which features outdoor themed gifts, decor and more.Next up is The Penn Dixie Fossil Park and Nature Reserve, a 54-acre park near Buffalo, New York, that was once an ancient undersea environment. For more outdoor activities, please connect with us on YouTube, Facebook and Instagram. Official Website Nearby Lodging (Affiliate Link):ĭelta Utah Hotels Other Articles of Interest: Travel 20 more miles down a well-maintained gravel road to reach the Trilobite Quarry. You will see a U-Dig Fossils sign when you start on the dirt road. At the Long Ridge Reservoir sign between mile markers 56-57, turn right. Driving Directionsįrom Delta, Utah You will need to travel 32 miles west on Highway 6/50. U-Dig provides you with buckets for your collections and the use of their rock hammers, or you may bring your own if you would like. Make sure you bring safety glasses to wear and gloves to protect your hands. You will want to bring plenty of food and lots of water. There are two very clean restrooms (outhouses) located at the quarry. Adults will have just as much fun as kids! The minute you arrive you will see trilobites and or pieces of trilobites on the ground. I highly recommend going to U-Dig Fossils, it is worth the drive. They can answer any questions you may have and help you on your way to find fossils. The people running U-Dig are very helpful and so friendly. I wish I had arrived at opening and collected the entire day, it was a blast! The saying, "Time flies when you are having fun" definitely applied for me while I looked for trilobites at the quarry. I collected for a little over four hours in the afternoon and found many trilobites. ![]() He found a "Asaphiscus Wheeleri" which is a common trilobite but it is a rare find because it is over 2 inches in length. The afternoon at "U-Dig Fossils" we Utahans were not alone, there were tourists from Japan, Delaware, and a famous opera singer from Chicago collecting that day. ![]() Most collectors that purchase trilobite fossils prefer that the trilobites are in the matrix (the rock itself). In a two hour period I found at least 15 whole trilobites that were just lying on the ground. Every single fossil that you find is yours to keep. ![]() Just recently a regular to the quarry found a rare trilobite named Olenoides Nevadensis, it is worth well over $2,000.00. The size of trilobite usually found is about an eighth of an inch to 2 inches in length. ![]() There are less common trilobites to be found as well. The most common trilobite fossils found at this location are Elrathia Kingi, Asaphiscus Wheeleri, Peronopsis Interstricta (Agnostus), and the Brachipod. It is located about 52 miles west of Delta, Utah. " U-Dig Fossils" provides you with 40 acres of the very best trilobite collecting property in the world. We only recommend products or services we personally use. If you click a link and make a purchase, Utah Outdoor Activities may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This article may include affiliate links. ![]()
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