This is an interesting series in that Catherine and I discovered a fossil bed in the beach rock uncovered by the recent storm surge of those mighty Pacific waves.

This shell fossil (above) is a typical representation of the fossils still embedded in the matrix that the surf uncovered (right click in the image for a larger view).

This shell fossil (above) is a typical representation of the fossils still embedded in the matrix that the surf uncovered (right click in the image for a larger view).
Preserved in rock from an earlier geological period the fossilized shells in this 'cluster of fossils' have eroded through the action of waves & the minute grinding of sand for thousands of years. .Try as we might we could not catch this image of this fossil without a thin covering of water. It was one of those times where we would follow the ebbing
waves out until this fossil was nearly exposed. Then I'd take a few shots of it through the water and then run from the next flooding surge of the waves.
In front of the cave stood these 'mushroom' rocks. Part of the same matrix the shells had fossilized in, the mushrooms are approximately three feet from the puddles to their tops. This is an important point for the next part of this notation.
Hope you still find pleasure in exploration & discovery...
Foster Fanning
Here's some reference info...
Stonerose Fossil Center:
http://www.stonerosefossil.org/
Oregon Beaches:
http://visittheoregoncoast.com/
Oregon Fossils:
http://www.oregongeology.org/sub/learnmore/fossils.HTM

It's always sad to mention a landmark destroyed by fire, and here I am touching base regarding just that topic in the Pacific NW. Anyone who has traveled WA State Highway 2 over the Cascade Mountains and into the Bavarian Village of Leavenworth has drove within fifty feet of the Alps candy and gift shop once located in Tumwater Canyon of the Wenatchee River Valley.

