It is extremely unlikely that the Koonwarra inland dig can be organised for early 2015. The logistics would still take several months' work to finalise. Therefore, we have started thinking about an ERTW dig for early 2015.
Crew, please pencil the following dates into your diaries. They are not confirmed yet, but are likely.
Saturday November 22nd 2014 - Field Report Presentation Day and Rookies' Briefing.
Sunday November 30th 2014 - Rookies' Day at Flat Rocks
Saturday February 7th to Saturday February 28th - Dig at Eric the Red West.
A date for Friends' Day at site has not yet been proposed.
Sunday, 20 July 2014
Thursday, 10 July 2014
Field Report Day
Due to Dr Tom Rich's travel commitments, the Field Report Day is likely to be later than usual this year (November rather than October). I will post the date once it is finalised.
Monday, 2 June 2014
Good Weekend article
During the Eric the Red West dig in February, John Elder visited the dig. John is a reporter for the Good Weekend magazine distributed in the Saturday Age. Last week the article finally appeared.
For those diggers who don't live in Melbourne, or who simply missed it, here it is.
For those diggers who don't live in Melbourne, or who simply missed it, here it is.
Monday, 5 May 2014
The Bathtub
On a recent fossil prospecting trip east of Potters Hill (led of course by Mike Cleeland), Stephen Broady shot some film. He calls it The Bathtub.
Friday, 25 April 2014
Filming at Eagle's Nest April 16th
A small group of Dinosaur Dreamers took part in the filming of an episode of "Coast" at Eagle's Nest, near Inverloch on Wednesday April 16th. The weather was perfect and Mike Cleeland topped it off by finding a fossil bone in the shore platform close to where the filming took place.
Dr Tom Rich and Dr. Tim Flannery discussed the discovery of Australia's first dinosaur bone at Eagle's Nest and Tim's student days when he, Rob Glenie and John Long re-discovered the site in the late 1970s.
left: Film crew and volunteers
arriving at Eagle's Nest.
right: Tom and Tim discussing
the history of the area.

left: volunteers breaking rock in the
background
right: Kim Davis, one of the rock breakers
Left: Jeorg found a bone that was so badly
weathered it wasn't worth keeping. Sorry,
Jeorg.
Right: John Wilkins, winner of "Fashions in
the Field" with his stylish helmet.
Fashionable and functional.
Left: Wendy Turner looking
disappointed because her tiny
endless shaft was rejected.
Right: Tom and Tim chatting between takes

Left: Mike and Tim examine the fossil bone
that Mike found not far from where the
filming was taking place.
Left: Mike prepares to cut out the fossil bone, while
Tim looks on.
Dr Tom Rich and Dr. Tim Flannery discussed the discovery of Australia's first dinosaur bone at Eagle's Nest and Tim's student days when he, Rob Glenie and John Long re-discovered the site in the late 1970s.
arriving at Eagle's Nest.
right: Tom and Tim discussing
the history of the area.
left: volunteers breaking rock in the
background
right: Kim Davis, one of the rock breakers
weathered it wasn't worth keeping. Sorry,
Jeorg.
Right: John Wilkins, winner of "Fashions in
the Field" with his stylish helmet.
Fashionable and functional.
disappointed because her tiny
endless shaft was rejected.
Right: Tom and Tim chatting between takes
Left: Mike and Tim examine the fossil bone
that Mike found not far from where the
filming was taking place.
Left: Mike prepares to cut out the fossil bone, while
Tim looks on.
Tuesday, 1 April 2014
Flat Rocks video
Steve Pritchard has posted a video of us at Inverloch during Friends' weekend (and a quick flash of the Otways) on YouTube. Check it out at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J25Y-W77Uzk&feature=youtu.be
Tuesday, 25 March 2014
The rock fall
I've had a couple of queries about how much rock fell down from the cliff. I'm not sure. I don't even know what one is supposed to measure it in. Tonnes? Square metres?
I do know that it completely obscured the rock rock (and the big boulder on the right was broken down nearer the cliff). We had 15 people working on it for about 10 hours, took about 20 buckets to Lesley's shed and left lots of big rocks on the beach.
Perhaps an engineering type could do some calculations?
I do know that it completely obscured the rock rock (and the big boulder on the right was broken down nearer the cliff). We had 15 people working on it for about 10 hours, took about 20 buckets to Lesley's shed and left lots of big rocks on the beach.
Perhaps an engineering type could do some calculations?
The rock fall |
The rock fall rock on the "rock rock" |
The rock fall (rock removed) with buckets for scale |
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