
| There are numerous reptile and invertebrate tracks in the Coconino, but no bones. For some scientists, tracks are more fascinating than bones, because they show behavior: walking, running, resting and so forth. So they give names to each distinctive trackway. The small reptile that made these tracks is called Chelichnus. |
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Coconino grains are quartz, a mineral both abundant and durable. When rocks
weather and erode, many minerals may be present in the resulting sediment.
Some of these minerals dissolve; others erode to dust. Usually, after blowing
in the wind for a very long time, only the sturdy quartz grains remain.
These dune quartz grains are very mature: uniform composition, small sand
size, very well rounded, and all grains about the same size.
Those features demonstrate the
grains’ origin in blowing dunes. Sand transported by water never reaches
this degree of maturity because water transports sand more slowly than
wind, causing less abrasion.
To turn a sediment into rock requires a natural glue: silica and calcite
cements are most common. Groundwater introduces the sediments to a dissolved
cement. The more cement, the harder the rock.
All
these stories pretend that people were alive when this formation was laid
down. But all are way before people.
Our tribe in Coconino
time
We have always lived in these wind-flapped tents. There is an oasis out
there--we hunt reptiles and amphibians that lumber down to drink. Sometimes
there are sandstorms that last three days. Then we tell each other the
long stories of our ancestors. We rarely think about the blowing sand.
Of course it is like this--always will be.