24 



BULLETIN 89, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 

 Fossil bones found in diagram 13, Quarry 13 — Continued. 



Original 



quarry 



Nos. 



Name of bone. 



100 

 101 

 102 

 103 

 104 

 105 

 106 

 107 

 108 

 109 

 110 

 111 



Fragment 



Dermal plate 



Dermal plate 



Cervical vertebra. 



Fragments 



Chevron 



do 



do 



Pubis, right 



Fragment 



....do 



Dorsal centra 



Pubis, part 



Pubis, left 



Pubis, part 



Fragment 



Chevron 



Ungual phalanx 



Pubis, part 



Eight fibula, proximal half. 



Fragment ot rib 



Median caudal vertebra 



Pubis, right 



Name of animal. 



Remarks. 



Stegosaurus . 



do 



....do 



Stegosaurus . 



do 



do 



do 



Stegosaurus. 



Stegosaurus.. 

 ....do 



.do.. 



do 



do 



Carnptosaurus . 

 Stegosaurus.. . 

 ....do 



Stegosaurus. 

 ....do 



Discarded. 

 Cat. No. 6531. 



Do. 

 Not catalogued. 

 Discarded. 

 Cat. No. 7410. 



Do. 



Do. 

 Cat. No. 6646. 

 Discarded. 



Do. 

 Cat. No. 6531. 

 Not found. 

 Cat. No. 6646. 



Do. 

 Cat. No. 760S. 

 Discarded. 

 Cat. No. 7407. 

 Cat. No. 7408. 

 Cat. No. 6646. 



Do. 

 Discarded. 

 Cat. No. 7410. 

 Cat. No. 6531. 



History of Quarry No. I. 1 



This quarry was situated on the west side of Oil Creek (Four Mite Creek) at the 

 eutrance to Garden Park, Fremont County, some 9 or 10 miles east by north of 

 Canon City, Colorado (pi. 1). A map of this region, drawn by Mr. M. P. Felch, 

 shows it to have been located in the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of 

 section 28, township 17 north, range 70 west. 



Fossil bones were first discovered in this locality in 1876 by the family of Mr. 

 M. P. Felch. Through the Canon City and Denver newspapers the matter was brought 

 to the attention of Professor Marsh, and in the spring of 1877 Dr. S. W. Williston 

 was sent to Canon City to investigate the alleged discoveries. The quarry, opened 

 by Doctor Williston, was worked for several years for Professor Marsh under the 

 very careful and skillful supervision of Mr. Felch. In the autumn of 18S6 2 

 this quarry was abandoned and nothing further was done here in the way of col- 

 lecting until 1900, when, under the direction of the late Mr. J. B. Hatcher, Mr. W. H. 

 Utterback reopened the quairy(see upper figure, pi. 1) foi the Carnegie Museum, of 

 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and worked it for a year with fair results. 



All of the fossils collected prior to 1882 are now in the Yale Museum, while those 

 found in subsequent years are in the United States National Museum and Carnegie 

 Museum collections. 



1 Extracted chiefly from Hatcher's account published in Annals of the Carnegie Museum, vol. 1, 1901, pp. 333-337, figs. 1 and 2. 

 -In the Annals of the Carnegie Museum Hatcher writes: "InlSSt all work at this locality was abandoned," but a map made 

 by Felch and collections in the National Museum show work done there in 1886. 



