Showing posts with label louisville kentucky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label louisville kentucky. Show all posts

Saturday, December 7, 2024

Astraeospongia meniscus Sponge Fossil

Photo by Laura Dykstra. (c) Field Museum of Natural History . CC BY-NC 4.0 https://fm-digital-assets.fieldmuseum.org/1163/578/P21403_fossil.jpg . (accessed on 2024-12-07)
 

While reading the Index Fossils of North America by Hervey W. Shimer & Robert R. Shrock from 1944, I found an interesting reference to Astraeospongia meniscus (Roemer, 1860) porifera fossil. It is listed as being found in Louisville, Kentucky and Brownsport, Tennessee. The creatures lived in the Silurian Period. This entry made me curious as I don't recalling find this fossil in the Louisville area but I have number of these fossils from Tennessee.

The picture above is from Chicago, Illinois, USA Field Museum of Natural History and was once part of the Borden Collection. It is great that the Field Museum is putting pictures of their fossils on-line. This fossil was from the defunct museum of William Borden (1823-1906) of Indiana. The fossil might have been collected by George Greene (1833-1917) who William Borden got a lot of local fossils from. 

This fossil was named by Dr. Carl Fredrick von Roemer (1818-1891) who is famous for his research of fossils found in Texas that he collected during his 1845-1847 visit there.

In his 1860 book, Die silurische Fauna des westlichen Tennessee / Eine palaeontologische Monographie, he talks about Dr. Gerard Troost (1776-1850) whom he visited in 1847 in Nashville, Tennessee. Below is the translation [German to English] of his Preface.

"When I returned from Texas in the summer of 1847 to Nashville, the capital of the state of Tennessee, and found a very friendly welcome and valuable instruction on the geological conditions of the country from Dr. G. Troost, who has made a great contribution to the natural history of the western states, my attention was particularly drawn to the beautifully preserved Silurian fossils in the excellent man's rich paleontological collection, the location of which was indicated as the Perry district (Perry County) in the western part of the state. In addition to the largely known forms of corals and brachiopods, there was a particularly large number of beautifully preserved crinoids, almost all of which were new in terms of species and mostly also in terms of gender, and many remarkable specimens from other animal classes. 

I immediately decided to visit the deposit of this remarkable fossil fauna myself and to gain a better knowledge of it by collecting it myself. Three weeks were spent on this trip, which was not without its difficulties and exertions, given the wild and sparsely cultivated nature of the area in question, but it also yielded a richer yield than I could have hoped for. The area over which the fossils in question are mainly found lies on both sides of the Tennessee River and includes the two districts (counties) Decatur on the left bank and Perry on the right bank'). Although I also visited some sites on the right bank, I collected mainly on the left bank. 

From a point about 5 English miles north of Brownsport, where I was hospitable in the house of Colonel Wallis Dixon, I roamed the entire area between Brownsport and Perryville at leisure and collected all the numerous "glades" hidden in the surrounding primeval forest, i.e. the small hills bare of tree growth and only covered at the top with low bushes of red cedar (Juniperus Virginiana L.), which form the actual sites of our fauna. This is how the collection was created which provided the material for the current work and which, although not necessarily complete, certainly contains the great majority of the species that make up the fauna in general and allows an almost correct picture of the latter to be given. If the publication of the paper dealing with this material has only now taken place, this is only partly due to the obstruction caused by other scientific works, but mainly due to the fact that it was necessary to wait to see whether the description of the organic inclusions in the corresponding layers of the state of New York by James Hall would not make a special description of the fauna of Tennessee unnecessary. 

However, since the publication of the second volume of the "Palaeontology of New York" containing the fossils of the "Niagara Group" has shown that the similarity between this fauna of the state of New York and that of Tennessee is sufficiently great to prove with certainty that the layers containing both faunas were deposited at the same time, but by no means so complete as to exclude the uniqueness of a significant number of species in each of the two faunas, this concern was removed and a description of the fauna appeared desirable.  

What was known about it from other sources was limited to a few incomplete and, given the state of paleontology at the time, unreliable lists of fossils given by Troost in his geological reports on the state of Tennessee, to the mention of a small number of the species that make up the fauna by E. de Verneuil in his valuable essay on the parallelism of the Polaeozoic layers in North America and Europe, and 1) Perry County also used to extend over the area on the left bank of the river, which has since become an independent district under the name Decatur County. In this older, broader sense, Perry County was designated by Troost and after him by other authors as the site where the Silurian fauna in question was found. In fact, the localities that Troost primarily exploited, and in particular the town of Perryville, are located on the left bank of the river in the Decatur district."

On page 2 he talks about the area that Dr. Troost discovered where he found Silurian fossils. Translated from German to English.

"The thickness of the entire sequence of layers cannot be determined in the region in which I have only become acquainted with it through my own observation, in the counties of Decatur and Perry on the Tennessee River, since the underlying layer is nowhere exposed here. Safford, who describes the sequence of layers as "the dyestone and gray limestone group," estimates it to be several hundred feet in the western part of the state, while it is said to be much smaller further east. The outcrop points where Troost first discovered the sequence of layers with its rich fauna and where I also collected the material on which the present work is based are small hills, 50 to 60 paces wide and usually only 10 to 25 feet high, without any trees or only covered with stunted and sparse tree growth on the top, the so-called "Glades," i.e. forest clearings, which are scattered in the primeval forest in the area between Brownsport and Perryville in significant numbers. On the bare slopes of these "glades," the layers, whose largely siliceous nature seems to be hostile to plant growth, come to light and which have been formed from the rock by weathering. dissolved, largely silicified fossils lie freely on the surface. If one is as lucky as I have been several times to find a virgin hill of this type in the dense forest, i.e. one that has not yet been trodden by a paleontological predecessor, then the yield is particularly rich, as the entire result of weathering over thousands of years then falls to the discoverer. "

On page 31, he talks about the unpublished crinoid fossils that Troost had found but laments now that Troost died in 1850 and the Troost names are meaningless. Roemer does realize that James Hall has the Troost manuscript describing them but has not published it. It would not be until 1909 when Columbia University graduate student Elvira Wood (1865-1928) publishes the Troost work after both men are long dead. Translated from German to English.

"Dr. G. Troost in Nashville, who had assembled a rich collection of organic inclusions from the Silurian layers and the carbonate limestone in the state of Tennessee and had devoted particular attention to the numerous crinoids in these older layers, sent the American Association for the Advancement of Science a list of all the crinoids he had known about from the older rocks of the state of Tennessee shortly before his death. This list was first printed in the Proceedings of the American Association. 1849 p. 60, Second Meeting held at Cambridge. Boston 1850. p. 62 and was subsequently included in Silliman's Journal of Sc. and Arts 1849, VIII, p. 419-420, and subsequently in Leonhard and Brown's Jahrbuch für Mineralogie etc. Jahrg. 1850 p. 376-377. It lists 88 species of crinoids and a few asterids and echinids, and gives a significant number of new generic names.  

Unfortunately, any description or diagnosis of the genera and species is missing, and even an indication of the localities and strata to which the individual species belong is missing. It is therefore impossible to determine from this list which species are meant by the various names. Even if, like me, one knows the Troost collection well from one's own examination and, on the other hand, owns specimens of most of the species contained in it, one is unable to determine the meaning of the names contained in that list. For example, I have no idea what generic forms are meant by the names Cabacocrinites, Balanocrinites, Agariocrinites, etc., although I very probably have the same forms in my collections made in the state of Tennessee. In the present text, therefore, the names of that list had to be completely disregarded when naming the species of crinoids to be described. Should it subsequently be possible to determine, for example with the help of Troost’s handwritten notes, that a greater or lesser number of the species to be described here are identical with species on that list, this would not affect the priority of the names I have chosen, because according to generally applicable nomenclatural principles, the publication of mere names of species without diagnosis or description does not justify a right of priority for such names. I am compelled to make this remark in order to avoid any confusion of names, especially because American authors have adopted individual names from Troost's list and given them preference over names of the same species by other authors who were the first to distinguish these species as new in a generally recognizable manner through description and illustration. 

Thus, my esteemed friend J. Hall, in the Report on the geological Survey of the State of Iowa by James Hall and I. D. Whitney Vol. I, Part II, Palaeontology. 1858, which contains a valuable extension of our knowledge of crinoids through the description and excellent illustration of a large number of crinoids from the Carboniferous Limestone and other older layers of the western states, has named a species of the genus Pentatrematites under the name Pentremites cherokeeus p. 691 and listed the literature references under this name as follows: “Pentremites cherokeeus: Troost, Ms. of Monograph; Catalogue, 1849, Proc. Am. Assoc. for the advancement of Science p. 60. Pentremites sulcatus: Roemer: Monogr. of Blastoideae 1852, p. 354, t. 6, f. 10a, b, c.” Based on a manuscript supposedly written earlier but never published and a list of names published in 1849, my name P. sulcatus, which I assigned in 1852 to a species that was in good faith believed to be new, is here removed. It is obvious that if such a failure to observe the recognized nomenclatural rules were to become more widespread, the security of the entire palaeontological nomenclature would be called into question."

On page 33, Roemer writes about the cystoid Caryocrinus ornatus (Say) and lists that the species Troost named of this genus are just varieties of this species. He also refers to as a crinoid when it is now known as a cystoid. Translated from German to English.

"This beautiful crinoid, whose structure was fully described by Leop. von Buch and James Hall based on specimens from Lockport in the state of New York, is the most common crinoid in our fauna. I have collected several hundred examples of the calyx in various glades. The dimensions of the largest of these are significantly larger than those observed by J. Hall at Lockport. The largest calyx I have is 65 millimeters. long and 50 millimeters wide, and individual loose tablets allow the conclusion that the cups were even larger. The usual size of the cups, as in Lockport, is about 30 millimeters long and 12 millimeters wide. Many examples therefore have a habitus somewhat different from that of the usual specimens from Lockport, in that the calyx narrows more towards the top towards the flat apex surface and the apex surface itself is smaller. The very large specimens in particular show this deviation. In some cases the apex surface also appears only smaller because the Lockport specimens usually preserved the pieces forming the arm bases have mostly fallen out in the specimens from Tennessee. Regarding the type of preservation, the calyxes are either silicified and then externally usually yellowish in color, or transformed into calcite and then white.
Say's Caryocrinites loricatus is a mere variety of the main form. Troost lists five other species of Caryocrinus (C. meconideus, C. hexagonus, C. granulatus, C. insculptus and C. globosus) in the already mentioned list of crinoids of the state of Tennessee, but not C. ornatus. After a personal, detailed examination of Troost's collection, I can confirm that all five alleged species are varieties of C. ornatus that are only distinguished by minor characteristics of the cup shape and the sculpture. The genus is currently only known in this single species and is an exclusively American genus. Apart from the western part of the state of New York, where the cups were found in bushels near Lockport during the digging of the Erie Canal, and in the county of Decatur in Tennessee, the species also occurs at the already mentioned locality of Beargrass Creek not far from Louisville in the state of Kentucky. In all three regions the species belongs to exactly the same level of Upper Silurian strata, as the accompanying fossils show. "

On page 34, he talks about a Troost specimen he studied called Apiocystites sp. Translated from German to English.

"APIOCYSTITES sp. Dr. Troost's collection in Nashville contained a small cystidea that probably belongs to the genus Apiocystites from the layers of our fauna in Decatur County. According to the rough sketch that I made of it and which I have in my possession, the species closely matches Hall's Apiocystites elegans and could possibly be identical with it. On the upper half of the elongated subcylindrical calyx, a round opening and two rhombus fields (“pectinated rhombs” by Forbes) were clearly visible. It would be desirable if a more precise identification of the species could be made based on the specimens from the Troost collection that remained in Nashville. I suspect that the name Echinocrinites fenestratus listed in Troost's crinoid list mentioned above refers to the species in question here."

On page 50, he remarks that Troost named 10 species of Eucalyptocrinus which are not valid. Translated from German to English.

" Incidentally, all Silurian Eucalyptocrinus species found so far belong to exactly the same geognostic level and also to the same Nordic facies of the Silurian group. In Europe, species of the genus are known from the island of Gotland, from Norway and from the English Wenlock limestone. In Norway, Kierulf found a beautiful, complete specimen of Eucalyptocrinus decorus in the uppermost limestone layers of the island of Malmö near Christiania. Troost lists 10 species of the genus Eucalyptocrinus in the above-mentioned list of Tennessee crinoids. Without being able to determine the meaning of these names in detail, I can assure you, based on Troost's collection, that most of these supposed species are to be regarded only as varieties."

 Plate II has images of the Astraeospongia meniscus which should be the holotype since he is credited with naming it. 



Lastly, I found what Dr. Roemer wrote on page 89 to be of interest, he mentions Louisville, Kentucky at least 4 times in his book and writes that he collected at Beargrass Creek near the city. He was led there by Dr. Lunsford Yandell (1805-1878) and Dr. Benjamin Franklin Shumard (1820-1869). Translated from German to English.

"It is especially the spongia, the crinoids and some brachiopods that establish the local independence of the fauna of Tennessee compared to that of New York. Among these, special emphasis should be placed on such species as Astraeospongia meniscus, Palaeomanon cratera, Astylospongia stellatim-sulcata, Plasmopora follis, Cyathophyllum Shumardi, Platycrinus Tennesseensis, Lampterocrinus Tennesseensis, Pentatrematites Reinwardtii and Calceola Tennesseensis, because, with their considerable size and striking form, they could not easily have been overlooked if they were present at all in the strata of western New York, while for such smaller species as Poteriocrinus pisiformis, Coccocrinus bacca, etc., it is quite possible that they have only accidentally escaped the attention of the New York paleontologists. On the other hand, the fauna of the Niagara group also has a number of distinguished forms which are lacking in the fauna of Tennessee. These include in particular some crinoids and trilobites such as Ichthyocrinus laevis, Lecanocrinus macropetalus, Stephanocrinus angulatus, Callocystites Jewettii and Lichas Boltoni. On the whole, the numerical ratio of the forms peculiar to each of the two faunas to those common to both is such as can be expected as a result of local influences given the considerable spatial distance between the deposits containing the two faunas and does not give any reason to question the previously assumed complete simultaneity of the deposits. The distribution area of ​​the fauna of Tennessee lies about 9 degrees of longitude further west than that of the corresponding layers of the state of New York and at the same time it is more than 7 degrees of latitude further south. In the entire wide space between Lockport and Perryville, layers of the same age have, to my knowledge, only been found at one point, namely at Bear Grass Creek, not far from Louisville in the state of Kentucky. On the slopes of a wooded gorge, gray limestone layers are exposed here in horizontal or slightly inclined layers, which contain the same fossil fauna as the layers of Perryville and Brownsport. I myself have collected specimens of Caryocrinus ornatus and Cytocrinus laevis at this locality, to which I was led by Mr. Yandell and Mr. Shumard. The exposure of the layers is, however, only imperfect and the preservation of the organic inclusions is less favorable than in the main distribution area of ​​the fauna in Tennessee. From the areas of North America further west, beyond the Mississippi, no layers with a fauna more closely comparable to ours have been known to date."

Saturday, November 11, 2023

Samuel Addison Casseday - Louisville Geologist

 

While reviewing some pages from the The Journal of the Cincinnati Society of Natural History Volume V Number 8 October 1882 article "Brief Mention of some of the Men who Aided in Developing the Science of Geology in America, but who are known no longer, except by their Works" by S. A. Miller pages 101-115, a new name was revealed to me tied to Louisville's natural history past. Samuel Almond Miller (1836-1897) starts the article off with this note: "Investigation, as some of the geologists have not received obituary notices in the scientific journals, and not being members of scientific societies they have passed away from their field of labor without proper public notice. It is but just that their names should be commemorated, and this article, even in its incompleteness, will no doubt possess some value for reference, and as a basis for a more thorough biography."

He writes on page 107, "S. A. CASSEDAY was born in Louisville, Ky., and died at the same place, in September, 1860. He is remembered for his valuable publications upon the Crinoidea."

Father 

 

His father was Samuel Casseday born August 6, 1795 in Lexington, Virginia. After his father, Peter Casseday, a American Revolutionary War veteran, died, the family moved to Kentucky in 1813. By 1822, he worked as a carpenter in Louisville and in 1824 after apprenticing as a clerk, at John S. Snead's hardware store. From there he and another store employee John Bull became dealers in queensware, glass and china goods through their company Bull & Casseday. In 1835, a new firm formed as Casseday, Raney, & Gamble which later became Casseday & Hopkins and by 1865 just Casseday and Sons. Samuel retired in 1870. He helped a number of charitable institutions during his lifetime: the Blind Asylum, the Orphanage at Anchorage, the Cooke Benevolence, the Presbyterian School. Samuel died on July 2, 1876 in Louisville and is buried at Cave Hill Cemetery.

Early Life

It is unclear the exact date of Samuel Addison Casseday's birth. His mother was Eliza McFarland Casseda (1800-1849) of Philadelphia. A birth date recorded in his brother-in-law's Bible lists November 13, 1831. His youngest sister in 1922 described their childhood environment growing up in one of her published books:

The Casseday home was notable in its day. In 1844 father bought an elevated plateau right in the heart of Louisville, Kentucky. There were eight children of us and he built a big sunny house, providing winter romp-rooms for his four little girls and a completely furnished carpenter shop for his four growing boys. This wise provision kept his girls and boys at home and also supplied companionship with the boys and girls of his friends... We were a big, happy, cultured family, bookish and artistic. I think we were modest withal, of our very fortunate circumstances did not strike us as exceptional at all or a matter to be vain of, but only as a happy matter of course. Father and mother, both, early taught us the Golden Rule as a rule for life.

A winter picture of the Casseday Family House, where they lived from 1844-1865 in Louisville

Paleontology

The Louisville newspapers listed geology talks that were given in the city around the mid-1800s. The first of these appeared in the The Louisville Daily Courier on Monday, June 4, 1849 stating the monthly meeting of the Academy of Natural Science at 8 o'clock will have a lecture on geology by S.A. Casseday, Esq.

He traveled to Europe to expand his geological studies from 1853 to 1854.

In 1854, he published in German Abdruck a. d . Zeitschr . d . deutschen geologischen Gesellschaft Jahrg .237 where he described the crinoid genus Batocrinus and two species B. icosidactylus (shown at the top of this posting) and B. irregularis (shown below). S. A. Miller translated this into English in the Eighteenth Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana of September 1892. It was entitled " DESCRIPTION OF A NEW GENUS OF CRINOIDS FROM THE MOUNTAIN LIMESTONE OF NORTH AMERICA , BY MR. CASSEDAY, OF LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY. "

On Saturday, August 25, 1855, page 4 The Louisville Daily Courier published this notice:

We are glad to hear that an effort is being made, with every prospect of success, to reorganize the Louisville Natural History Society. Two winters ago it had a brief, but highly useful existence, and the memory of the instructive and pleasant lectures, delivered under the auspices, is yet cherished by those who were so fortunate as to be hearers... There are others, younger in years, but scarcely less proficient than their seniors, whose ambition in so unusual a province of study should be stimulated by popular approbation. Among these is Mr. S. A. Casseday, a young gentleman whose natural inclinations and talents have been furthered by the greatest possible advantages in the scientific schools of Germany. In him the Natural History Society has an enthusiastic, yet unassuming member, whose labors the older members highly appreciate.

In 1857, The Palaeontological Report of S.S. Lyon, E.T. Cox, and Leo. Lesquereux as Prepared for the Geological Report of Kentucky and Published in Vol. 3 was published. On page 495, it is written "For valuable hints and assistance our thanks are due to Dr. D.D. Owen; also, to Samuel Casseday, for the use of his cabinet of Crinoidea and Olivanites."

The Louisville Daily Courier on Monday,  November 8, 1858 that the Academy of Natural Science appointed Mr. S.A. Casseday chair and Prof. Wm. Hailmain as secretary. They listed the objectives of the group:

1. The formation of a library pertaining to natural sciences.
2. The cultivation of natural sciences by its members.
3. The diffusion of a taste for natural science in the community, by means of public lectures.
The same paper on Monday, November 15, 1858 listed that evening the society would hold a meeting at the Female High School at the corner of Center and Walnut Streets. Mr. Casseday will read a paper entitled "Apparent Discrepancies between the Mosaic and Geologic Account of Creation."

On September 27, 1858, The Louisville Daily Courier published a description of Saturday (September 25, 1858) Sixth Annual Exhibition by The Kentucky Mechanics Institute. The following refers to Dr. James Knapp who I wrote about in an early posting. They listed:
 
A case of fossils and minerals, from the cabinet of Dr. Knapp, presents a fruitful field for thought. Corals from the ancient coral reef of the falls, now many thousands of years old; minerals elaborated in the recondite laboratories of the globe; and huge stalactites, formed by the slow dripping of water form the roof of some cavern; combine to carry the feelings back into a former existence, dreamed of only by geologists... Some fine calumets, made from the redstone quarries of the Northwest, belonging to the same gentleman, remind us of the quint description of this peculiar stone in Longfellows' Hiwatha. A case of birds, animals, etc. for the cabinet of S.A. Casseday, Esq., complete this portion of the exhibition.

The Louisville Daily Courier Wednesday November 17, 1858 edition page 1 published a notice by the The Academy of Science in Louisville, Kentucky. 

We regret that the initiate meeting of this institution, which promises to prove so valuable in directing the literary tastes of our city, should have been marked by the production of a paper that is likely to cause suspicion to rest upon the Academy. We refer to the essay of Mr. S.A. Casseday. He argued with great ingenuity, much plausibility, and show of learning worthy of a better cause, that the Mosaic account of the creation did not coincide with that deduced by geologists. It would be an easy task, but one that we do not covet, to disprove the assumption of Mr. Casseday. There is, and there can be, no real discrepancy between the ible and geology. The impress of the Divine hand is upon both. Each sustain the other. We have high admiration of Mr. Casseday's talent, and regret that he has seen fit to expend this time and researches in so questionable a manner. Mr. Dembitz reads the next paper before the Society. The following officers were chosen Monday night: President, S. A. Casseday; Vice President, T. E. Jenkins; Secretary, W. N. Hailman; Treasurer, G. Dembitz; Librarian, C. G. Knapp.

On Wednesday, January 19, 1859, page 1 The Louisville Daily Courier published an article entitled OUR FALLS. It follows:
Since the eventful day upon which Gen. Geo. Rogers Clark set sail from the midst of "our falls" upon the adventurous expedition which proved so fruitful of honor to his arms, the falls about the Ohio have proven a historic object. That they were converted into a higher, and holier, and deeper interest has not been generally known. Last evening, Prof. Yandell delivered, in the University Hall, an elaborate discourse upon the geological formation of the falls. He demonstrated conclusively that the action of ages had changed the formation of the rocks. Think of it! We might have had a cascade of water that would have equaled the famed Niagara. Prof. Yandell demonstrated the positions of his lecture of a fine display of corals and other geological specimens. Together with Mr. S. A. Casseday, he has the finest collection of Devonian rocks in the world. They are all a truthful witness of the great I AM.

The American Journal of Science in 1860 published an article entitled "Description of Nine new species of Crinoidea from the Subcarboniferous Rocks of Indiana and Kentucky" by Sidney Smith Lyon (1808-1872)  and S.A. Casseday. They named Pterotocrinus depressus,  Pterotocrinus pyradmidalis, Pterotocrinus rugosus, Zeacrinus ovalis, Cyathocrinus dekadactylus, Cyathocrinus hexadactylus, Actinocrinus indiaanensis, Actinocrinus coreyi, and Onychocrinus exculptus.

In a biographically book published in 1882, his sister Fannie listed an entry as "was a geologist, and was a correspondent of Alexander von Humboldt, Lyell, and Prof. Rose... he died under thirty years of age." Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859) was a famous German naturalist and explorer. Humboldt met with President Thomas Jefferson in 1804 where the had earlier discussed among other things, mammoth teeth fossils.
 
The Falls of the Ohio as it looked in the early 1900s. Image colorized.
 
His sister Fannie wrote a history book, The Child's Story of the Making of Louisville in 1914, on page 24 she writes about the Falls of the Ohio and her memories of collecting fossils with her brother.
The term Falls appears hardly justifiable to the people of to-day. There seem now not even to be the rough and roaring eddies which danced in the sunlight before the eyes of the writer when, as a little girl, her geologist brother used to take her over the Falls at low water, his hammer in his hand and a bag for rare specimens of corals and shells slung over his shoulder.

Wonderful and beautiful and curious were the fossils he collected from that old Devonian sea, which once so teemed with life. From all over the civilized world men of science used to come to Kentucky and to Louisville to study the fossil remains on the Ohio Falls. Even that great man, Alexander von Humboldt, wrote autograph letters on the subject to that same brother, one of which still remains in  the family. Even now at lowest water, when the Kentucky chute is dry or very nearly so, one can see an ancient coral reef made of fine-textured "coral sand" about twenty feet in thickness and filed with fossilized corals exquisitely preserved. Louisville children should visit the Falls and see conditions there for themselves.

Family

His oldest brother Benjamin Casseday (1825-1878) became a journalist and later wrote the 1852 book, History of Louisville

His brother Alexander C. Casseday (1836-1862) enlisted in the Confederate army and attained the rank of major. He was captured in Cumberland, Kentucky and later died in a prisoner of war camp in Columbus, Ohio on March 21, 1862.

His oldest sister Mary W. Casseday (1839-1874) married a Presbyterian Reverend William Thomas McElroy (1829-1910). After his death, Reverend McElroy's papers ended up in the Filson Historical Society along with S.A. Casseday's geological diary from his trip to Europe and letters during that time.

It turns out the most famous person in the family would be his sister Jennie H. Casseday (1840-1893) who was in a horrific horse carriage accident when she was 21 years old. After the accident, she was bedridden the rest of her living days.  In 1878 she created the Jennie Casseday Flower Mission to distribute flowers and scripture texts to the poor and sick of the community. The mission also distributed flowers to those in prisons. This movement gained popularity and by 1882 was spread across the United States with the help of the Women's Christian Temperance Union. She also helped organize the Louisville chapter of the Order of the King's Daughters.

Samuel Anniston's youngest sister Fannie Casseday Duncan (1844-1936) wrote a number of books and was quite the historian. Some of those books include: The Child's Story of the Making of Louisville (1914), The Message of the Lord's Prayer To Men of the Twentieth Century (1919),  Jennie Casseday of Louisville (1922), and When Kentucky Was Young (1928).

Death

While the Find-A-Grave web site record for Samuel Addison does not list a birth or death date or a picture of his gravestone when I started writing this. So I visited Cave Hill Cemetery and took some pictures in section B, lot 75 where the Casseday family is buried. Reverend McElroy's Bible lists S.A. Casseday death date as September 13, 1860. The gravestone degraded after 160 years and is hard to read. It looked to me that the death year was 1860 and the day was 13 while I could not make out the month.

This is a picture of the Casseday family plot at Cave Hill Cemetery. The arrow points to S.A. Casseday grave. The large stone with a sphere at the top of it is where his sister Jennie Casseday is buried. It was paid for by donations from the school children of Louisville.

On October 15, 1860, The Louisville Daily Courier published this on page 3:

Kentucky Museum - We are gratified to learn that Samuel Casseday, Esq., has deposited in this promising institution the cabinet of his lamented son, Samuel A. Casseday. The collection is of rare value, comprising more than two thousand paleontological specimens, selected and arranged with scientific care, many of them discovered and described for the first time by the collector. Surely no more fitting monument could be elevated by the afflicted father to his departed son, and generations will bless the diligent collector and faithful scholar for the benefits and pleasures afforded them by the result of his patient toil and research in the field of science.

Legacy

I am not sure what became of the Kentucky Museum that probably the holotype specimens of Batocrinus crinoid fossils went to. The Smithsonian and Harvard collection databases show this genus in their collections and some are from Indiana. The Harvard collection shows 7 specimens of Batocrinus irregularis from Spergen Hill, Indiana (type locality) that were collected by George H.(K) Green(e), catalog number IPCR-27. It could be possible that New Albany, Indiana fossil dealer Greene obtained the Kentucky Museum's collection and later sold it to Harvard.

 In 1868 F. B. Meek & A.H. Worthen in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia article "Notes on some points in the Structure and Habitats of the Palaezoic Crinoidea" named a new species of crinoid Batocrinus cassedayanus in which they wrote "The specific name is given in honor of Mr. S. A. Casseday, deceased, the author of the genus Batocrinus."


Monday, October 23, 2023

Rogers Clark Ballard Thruston - Louisville Geologist

My interest in this geologist stems from some fossil specimens found in Colonel Lucien Beckner's collection a Pennsylvanian Period gastropod found in the coal mines of eastern Kentucky and some gastropods from maybe the Eocene of Naples, Florida.

Early Years

Rogers "Rog" Clark Ballard was born on November 6, 1858 to Frances "Fanny" Ann Thruston (1826-1896) and Andrew Jackson Ballard (1815-1885) in Louisville, Kentucky, USA. He was born into a wealthy and prestigious family; his great-grandmother was George Rogers Clark (1752-1818) sister. Rogers began his early education at Hopkins Grammer of New Haven, Connecticut and then Williston Seminary of East Hampton, Massachusetts. After his freshman year of college, in the summer of 1877 he helped his father with mining interests in Colorado thus missing the start of his sophomore term.

He graduated in 1880 from the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University with a degree of Bachelor of Philosophy. To round out his education, late in life the University of Louisville conferred a Master of Arts degree upon him in 1937 and the University of Kentucky awarded him a degree of Doctor of Laws in 1942.

Occupations

After graduating Yale, he started as a clerk for the Monon Railroad office in Louisville and worked his way up to Assistant Ticket Auditor. Later, he became a metallurgist for the Kentucky Geological Survey (KGS) on July 1, 1882. At the age of 25, on October 27, 1884, the Fayette County Court appended his mother's maiden name Thruston to his last name. His mother, the last of the Thrustons, wanted her family name to live on but as it turned out, he never married or had any children. He would sign paperwork with his initials RCBT or R.C. Ballard Thruston. 

 

Appears to be a Bellerophon meekianus gastropod fossil found by George Rogers Ballard Thruston in 1883 in a coal seam at Elkhorn Creek, Pike County, Kentucky.

He helped survey and photograph ("kodak") Pike, Letcher, Harlan, and Bell counties till he left the KGS in 1887. RCBT took employment with the Kentucky Union Land Company where he was buying land in Harlan and Bell counties as well as Wise and Lee counties in Virginia for coal and iron mining. By 1890, he was promoted to Superintendent of the Land Department where he worked on acquiring land for timber and coal in Estill, Powell, Lee, Breathitt, Perry and Letcher counties. In the 1880s, he and his brothers acquired acreage through the Interstate Investment Company in the Big Stone Gap section of Virginia for coal production. RCBT managed the Big Stone Gap Iron Company from 1895 to 1899.

As a side note, The Trail of the Lonesome Pine by John Fox, Jr. (1862-1919) was published in 1908. It became one of the best selling books in the United States in 1908 and 1909. The story takes place in the Appalachian Mountains of Virginia and Kentucky. Its main character is geologist John Hale who the author in part based on Rogers Clark Ballard Thruston. The story was adapted into a 1912 Broadway production, a 1916 Cecil B. DeMille film, a 1923 film and a 1936 film starring Fred MacMurray (1908-1991), Sylvia Sidney (1910-1999), and Henry Fonda (1905-1982). The author John Fox, Jr. was a friend to RCBT in 1890 where his family lived at Big Stone Gap, Virginia.

A colorized image from John Fox Jr. 1908 book The Trail of the Lonesome Pine showing the main characters mountain girl June Tolliver and geologist-engineer Jack Hale. It is thought heroine is based off a Keokee, Virginia girl Elizabeth Morris and the character Jack is partially based off of Rogers Clark Ballard Thruston who was a surveying geologist in the Big Stone Gap, Virginia area.

Retirement

In 1919, at the age of 61, Thruston retired with the intent to spending the rest of life studying history and traveling.

On November 18, 1921 he helped dedicate the Sunshine Ballard Cabin to Berea College. It was in honor of one of his relatives. The cabin allowed the school to expand its Fireside Industries department which taught weaving, basketry, homespun and hand work.

In 1922, he traveled to Naples, Florida, while there he found a number of gastropod shells (fossils?) known as Theodoxus reclivatus (Say, 1822) [modern name is Vitta usnea (Röding, 1798)].


 

In 1925, he participated in a history pageant in Lexington, Kentucky and dressed as his ancestor George Rogers Clark. He would spend the rest of his life promoting a monument be created to honor George Rogers Clark.

In 1930, he unveiled a monument to George Rogers Clark in Springfield, Illinois.

The Filson Historical Society

Today, the biggest impact Mr. Thruston left upon the Louisville area were his contributions to The Filson Historical Society (FHS). In 1919, he offered $50,000 to help the society obtain a fireproof room to store its collections. When the founder of the society, Reuben T. Durrett died in 1913, his family sold his historic collection the University of Chicago. RCBT went to Chicago to retrieve items that really belonged to the society and returned them to Louisville. He was president of the society from 1923 to 1946. In 1923, he helped the society purchase a new home and in 1929 covered half the cost of moving into it. 

He purchased F. W. Leach's research work The Genealogies of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence and donated to the FHS. His photo collection of over 20,000 images from 1880-1942 was also donated to the FHS collection. He contributed the following to the FHS History Quarterly

1926 The Signing of the Declaration of Independence 

1928 Letter by Edward Harris 1797 

1935 Some Recent Findings Regarding the Ancestry of General George Rogers Clark 

1937 Reprint of The Filson Club Program of June 25 1937 The Lincoln Pilgrimage

1940 Rachel Eastham Not Mary Byrd or Bird was the Wife of John Rogers The Grandfather of George Rogers Clark

1941 After the Death of George Rogers Clark

Legacy

He died at 2:15 a.m. at Jewish Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky on December 30, 1946. His funeral was held at Christ Church Cathedral followed by his burial at Cave Hill Cemetery. His remains are buried next to his parents in section G, lot 24, grave 12 at the cemetery.

RCBT left a very explicit 9 page will. 

Here is part of it, "As to the disposition of my remains after death. I am the holder of lots 24 and 25 in Section G, in Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Kentucky. There are buried the remains of my maternal grand-parents and their children, my parents, a brother, my sister and certain law kin. The space next to the grave of my father has been set aside for my remains. There I have erected a headstone with an inscription complete except as to the dates of my death; that date I direct my executor to
have suitably inscribed thereon.
My desire is that my body be cremated; that my ashes be placed in a simple glass, metal or pottery container and buried on the site above named. I also desire that all unnecessary forms and ceremonies be dispensed with and that the disposition of my remains after my death be accomplished simply, quickly and inexpensively."

As described above, his financial and research material contributions to the Filson Historical Society are probably his most lasting mark on the Louisville area. In 1947, the Society devoted an entire issue of the History Quarterly to his memory. 

Besides the fossils I have documented earlier, he also left specimens to the old museum that was part of the Louisville Free Public Library which was later transferred to what is now the Kentucky Science Center. They are de-accessioning that collection so Thruston's items might now go to the Filson Historical Society or Frazier History Museum. The Speed Art Museum has some of his paintings including one called the View of Jerusalem from 1867.

He and his brothers donated a number of pieces of land to become parks: Ballard Square, Churchill Park and George Rogers Clark Park. In addition, they deeded the original home of George Rogers Clark on Poplar Level Road to the City of Louisville.




 


Sunday, January 1, 2023

Nettelroth's Fossil Snail Images

 

Image courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution Specimen Catalog Number:  USNM PAL 51268 Specimen GUID: http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/3cffa9b15-4a41-4c0b-8664-be0c46084ecc Photographer Holly Little. Specimens housed in the collections of the Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution 

Recently, I gave a presentation about the 1889 book entitled Kentucky Fossil Shells by Henry Nettelroth (1835-1887) to a local geology group. During my presentation I brought up one of the snail fossils found called Platyceras dumosum (Conrad, 1840). They are found from time to time in Clark County, Indiana USA and Jefferson County, Kentucky USA. I consider them to be the porcupines of the Devonian sea with their array of long spines covering the whorled shell. Nettelroth had one illustrated plate XXIII just for these snail fossils. You can learn more about Henry Nettelroth in my December 3, 2022 posting about him.

 


In 1907, his two sons Herman and Alexander Nettelroth sold his prized fossil collection of about 8,000 specimens to the Smithsonian Institution and the U.S. National Museum. This collection was documented by Ray S. Bassler (1878-1961) in the 1908 publication of Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections Vol. V Quarterly Issue Part 2 in an article "The Nettelroth Collection of Invertebrate Fossils". 

Almost always the spines are broken off on these fossils and I wondered if the ones still at Smithsonian were still intact as shown in the plate illustration. So on December 21, 2020 I sent an e-mail to them asking if the fossil USNM PAL 51268 could be imaged. As it turns out 15 specimens were assigned to that number. To my surprise Mark Florence, Deputy Collections Manager Invertebrate Paleontology responded that they could image those fossils but the facility was on COVID-19 lockdown.

Image courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution Specimen Catalog Number:  USNM PAL 51268 Specimen GUID: http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/3cffa9b15-4a41-4c0b-8664-be0c46084ecc Photographer Holly Little. Specimens housed in the collections of the Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution 

 

COVID lasted a lot longer they I anticipated but they did not forget my request and on October 13, 2022 when they returned to the facility I was asked if the images were still needed. Later on December 22, 2022 I received a message from Mark Florence that a Smithsonian Institution's photographer Holly Little had imaged the fossils. Happily, images of those fossils have now been added to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Department of Paleobiology Collections database at this link: https://collections.nmnh.si.edu/search/paleo/?ark=ark:/65665/3cffa9b154a414c0b8664be0c46084ecc

 At our next geology group meeting, I hope to give an update to my group and show the images they took in comparison to the ones illustrated on the plate. I think the top image matches figure 3 in the original plate illustrated by Chas Starck of Louisville Lithographic Company. As pointed out in the recent e-mail from the Smithsonian, some of the spines had been broken off the original fossils.

A question I do have is why some of the fossils have green diamond shapes attached to them. I assume the ones attached to wooden boards where put on display at one time. It is nice to see fossils that were collected from the Louisville area 137-152 years ago and sent to Washington D.C. 116 years ago.

 

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Large Horn Coral Embedded in a Fossil Fireplace



One of the largest horn coral fossils known to have existed was the Siphonophrentis elongata (Rafenesque & Clifford, 1820). When you find a piece of one these fossils you know it. It would be amazing to find one almost fully intact at this size. Fossil was probably found in the Jeffersonville Limestone of Clark County, Indiana, USA. This creature would have existed in the Devonian Period.

Second image is of the side view and is probably about 20 cm long and 8 cm in diameter.


This fossil is part of large collection of fossils that make up a large fireplace. The fossils are from a variety of places. Unfortunately, the creators of the fireplace have passed away making it difficult to determine the exact location of where this specimen is from.

Monday, December 9, 2019

Gennaeocrinus kentuckiensis Crinoid Calyx Fossil


This fossil appears to be a Gennaeocrinus kentuckiensis (Shumard, 1866) crinoid calyx fossil. It was found in the Jeffersonville Limestone of Jefferson County, Kentucky USA. This layer dates to the Devonian Period (Givetian). Genus was named by Charles Wachsmuth and Frank Springer in 1881.

 Wow, this fossil has a very nicely preserved outer pattern!

Document used to identify the fossil was Memoir 16 The Devonian Crinoids of the State of New York by Winifred Goldring, The University of the State of New York, 1923. Page 558? description of plate 31 on page 228?. One of the specimens used to describe fossil is listed as from collection of Doctor Springer and found at Hamilton Shale of Falls of the Ohio, Louisville, Ky. Also listed is a American Museum Natural History number 4162 found at Bear Grass creek in Louisville, Ky.

Thanks to Kenny for image and discovering this fossil.

LINK to source document.

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Rhodocrinus nodulus Crinoid Calyx Fossil


This fossil appears to be a Rhodocrinus nodulus (Hall) crinoid calyx fossil. It was found in the Jeffersonville Limestone of Jefferson County, Kentucky USA. This layer dates to the Devonian Period.

Document used to identify the fossil was Memoir 16 The Devonian Crinoids of the State of New York by Winifred Goldring, The University of the State of New York, 1923. Page 488 description of plate 2 on page 89. Specimen used to describe fossil is listed as from collection of Doctor Springer and found at Hamilton Shale of Falls of the Ohio, Louisville, Ky.

Thanks to Kenny for image and discovering this fossil.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Chain Coral Fossil


Images of a Silurian Period chain coral. The fossil was found in Jefferson County Kentucky USA. Fossil was found in the Louisville Limestone layer.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Fossils Embedded in Column at Speed Art Museum


If you ever visit the Speed Art Museum in downtown Louisville next to the campus of the University of Louisville, check out the polished columns leading the Grand Staircase. The arrow in the image points to an area of the column with interesting fossils. It is next to the entrance to the Ancient art rooms.

The image above shows crinoid stem sections. The one shaped it a star pattern is particularly nice. The next image appears to be fenestrate bryozoan fossil. The polishing of the slab has made its details standout quite nicely.


On a future visit, I might ask the staff if they have any information about where rock columns were quarried at.

Also in the first picture you can see (in between column and statue) in the distance an Egyptian sarcophagus lid made of limestone. It has quite a few fossils embedded in it. Unfortunately, it is on loan from another museum and is not allowed to be photographed so I cannot make a specific post about it. :( So if you visit the museum check it out up close in its display case and see if you can find the fossils! 

Friday, November 11, 2011

KYANA Geological Society Annual Show 2011


Another good show to attend if you are in the Louisville, Kentucky area November 12-13, 2011. The gym of the Resurrection Lutheran Church was filled with tables selling minerals, jewelry, fossils, geology supplies, art, and holiday gifts.


The main display attraction is a set of fluorescent minerals presented by Danny Settles of Danville, Kentucky. He had three custom cases with shortwave, midwave, and longwave UV fluorescent minerals. The cases were contained in a black curtain area with an illuminated green light button.  Once the viewer pressed the button, the incandescent lights turned off the UV lights switched on.  As Danny explained to me, the lights were custom made with a preheating system to extend the bulb life and cooling fans to keep the bulbs from getting too hot.  After a fixed amount of time the UV lights power off and the white light returns.

The longwave UV case had Weardale, England fluorite (blue-purple), North Carolina opal (green), Canada sodalite (orange), and I think fluorite China and Ohio. Not as familiar with midwave specimens but the red one is from Iran. Shortwave UV specimens are of course dominated by Franklin/Sterling Hill, New Jersey.


Another display case had a very interesting knife with what looks to be an agate handle and meteorite iron blade. The next picture shows what appear to be cut and polished Kentucky agate specimens.



I met a number of friendly dealers and members of the KYANA Geological Society of which I belong. Since I also maintain the web site I tried extra hard this year to get names of people and companies whose material was at the show I was taking pictures of.  Unfortunately, I ran out of time and did not get to see every table at the show but the following is a sampling of people I visited with.

Two dealers I do not believe I encountered before were nice enough to chat with me. John LaMont traveled to Louisville from Brookville, Indiana and runs Lamont's Rock Pile (Jewelry, Carvings, Fossils, Slabs, Cabs, Misc.).  He had some appropriate carving of horses which I thought were very nice. Also on display were a parrot and eagle. In addition, he had a variety of Ordovician trilobites from Ohio (Flexicalymene), fish from Wyoming, ammonites from Madagascar, cephalopods from Morocco, and trilobites from Utah.



A dealer I believe is new to the Louisville show but a veteran of show circuit is Mark Palatas. He had a large selection of Paleozoic shark teeth.  In addition, a good selection of Waldron Shale fossils which I enjoy studying. The following pictures of the Indiana crinoid calyx and Paciphacops Oklahoma trilobites also below to him.




I encountered long time KYANA member and dealer Bob Robinson selling polished spheres and slabs.


Long time mineral and fossil dealer Alan Goldstein had some very nice iridescent pyrite specimens from Kentucky for sale.



Panoramic image of the show floor taken 11-11-11.



So if you are looking for a holiday gift or want to increase your geological collection, visit the show.  Admission and parking are free. Learn more at the KYANA Geological Society web site: http://www.kyanageo.org/showflier.htm




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