PALEO & GEO TOPICS: Comments by R. L. Squires
Dr. Squires shares his enthusiasm for Interesting paleontologic and geologic topics with the general public.
Friday, May 29, 2026
Historical Overview of Late Cretaceous Mollluscan Paleontologists on the west coast
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
THE ECHIDNA FROM “DOWN UNDER”
The primitive mammal echidna (also known as the spiny anteater) is a quill-covered monotreme (i.e., a type of ancient marsupial). The echidna, along with the platypus, are the only egg-laying mammals living today.
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Mammalia
Clades (two of them)
Order Monotremata
Family Trachyglossidae
Genus Tachyglossus
Type Species T. aculaeatus
There are two living genera: Tachyglossus lives in Australia and New Guinea and Zaglossus, which lives only in New Guinea. The former has no known fossil species, but Zaglossus has two fossil species (known only from New Guinea).
The echidna is a quill-covered monotreme-type of ancient marsupial and is an egg-laying mammal. Echidnas are closely related to another egg-laying mammal, namely the duck-billed platypus. These are the only groups of living mammals that lay eggs.
Echidnas do not have a poison spur. They also have no teeth. Although they are unable to bite or chew, they use their long sticky tongues to catch termites. Echidnas are powerful diggers! They do not have a venous spur.
The fossil record of echidnas is poorly constrained, but they apparently evolved from the duck-billed playpus sometime between 112 and 19 million years ago (middle Cretaceous to early Miocene).
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
THREE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FLYING INSECTS
Figure 1. "Crane fly."
Tipula planicornis (has a large-sized body about 1 3/4 inches long) and very long and thin legs. This insect somewhat resembles a very large mosquito, as it has a long body and long legs. It also has brownish wings. It feeds on nectar and is active all year. There are three living species of this crane fly in the Los Angeles area (Hogue, 2015) p. 248).
The second insect featured in this blog post is Leptoglossus clypealis, the “western leaf-footed bug.” It is classified as being in family Coridae. This insect is 18-19 mm long. It is brown with a flared [triangular shaped arrow-head like] flat extension on its rear legs. It also has a white, zig-zag band across its wings (Hogue, 2015). This insect is commonly found on Jupiter trees, but it can be a pest on agriculture crops.
The third insect featured in this blog is Euschistus servus?, or the “brown stink bug.” It is dark colored, with a “shield-shaped” body. It can grow to a length of 13 mm. It attacks peaches, tomatos, bans, corn, squashi, etc. There are at least 20 described species, and they are active during the day (Wikipedia, 2026). Theses kind of bugs, like the other two species mentioned here are active during the day and can produce an acrid-smelling vapor which discourages its enemies (Hogue and Hogue, 2025). The geologic time range of “stink bugs,” is early Triassic (250 230 million years ago to Recent (Wikipedia, 2026.
Reference
Hogue, C.L. [revised by J.N. Hogue] 2015. Insects of the Los Angeles Basin, 3rd ed. Natural History Museum of the Los Angeles Basin, 479 pp.
Friday, May 22, 2026
GOLDEN RAIN TREE
This tree is unforgettable if you see it in October when the tree undergoes the shedding of its very abundant golden-yellow pollen. That is how this tree got its name: when it sheds its pollen (over several weeks time), the ground beneath the tree is quite yellow and looks like gold dust has “rained down” from the tree. Three species are known, and the one shown here is Koelreuteria bipinnata = the “Golden Rain Tree.”
Figure 1. Golden rain tree in Santa Clarita, Southern California.
Koelreuteria is native to China, Korea, and Outer Mongonlia (i.e., in both Russia and Mongolia). It has been was cultivated in Japan since at least the 1200’s, and it was introduced to Europe in 1747 and to North America is 1763. It is supposedly now a popular landscape tree worldwide. It is drought-tolerant (once it is well rooted). It is a moderately hardy tree. I had never seen one the until Fall of 2025, when I spotted, in a local municipal park, a 40-foot-tall tree with “clumps” of golden pollen.
The leaves of this fast-growing tree are bipinnate. The leaves have serrated margins, and the tree branches have clusters of small golden-yellow flowers. Also present are numerous, pink/red, paper-thin parchment-thin (lantern like) seed pods (each pod containing two small black seeds). With ripening, these fragile pods lose most of their color, become brownish pink (see Figure 3) and eventually fall off the tree.
Classification
Kingdom Plantar
Clades (4 of them)
Order Sapindales
Famly Sapindaceae
Genus Koelreuteria
Type species K. paniculata
The oldest know fossil of Koelreuteria (fruit valves) is from the Paleocene of southern Russia (Ablaev, 2000). Fossil fruits of this genus have also been found from middle Eocene deposits of the Green River Formation and Eocene deposits of British Columbia (see Wikipedia, 2025). Also found in the upper Eocene (about 34 million years old) Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument (see National Park Service Website nps.gov for some images of fossils (including a fossil plant from the Florissant Fossil Beds).
The species shown here is K. bipinnata. For images of the other two living species, see the website listed below.
Figure 1. Golden Tree in the process of shedding its "golden" pollen.
Figure 2. Seed pods (red color) of the Golden Tree.
Figure 3. Various parts of the Golden Tree: leaves, dried-out seed pods (in the previous figure these seed pods
were red, but a few months later = when this additional figure was taken, the red color had gone), and some other small-red flowers still
attached to their thin stems.
References
Ablaev, A. G. 2000. Paleogene biostratigraphy of the coastal region in south Primorye. Vladivostok: Dal’nauka [in Russian].
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ttRU1-dlMR8
National Park Service Website nps.gov
Wikipedia 2025
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
THE ALMOND TREE NUT
The almond tree (genus Prunus) is one of the earliest domesticated fruit trees. Based on molecular dating, it diverged apparently from the peach tree around 6 million years ago (= latest Miocene time). The earliest know fossilized almond tree remains are of Pleistocene age (17,000 to 14,000 years ago). Humans in the Near East/Himalaya Mountains have cultivated it (= genetic “engineering”) now for thousands of years.
Almond trees are a type of drupe because the each fruit of an almond trees has a pit. Inside the pit, is a seed = the almond nut, which a person eats. Examples of other drupes are peaches, plums, cherries, walnut, and pecans. The "rule of thumb" is that if a plant produces a pit, then that plant is a drupe.
The almond tree is closely related to the peach tree, and it is likely that almond trees originated by divergence peach trees. The blooms of the almond tree are white and pink.
The almond nut that is so popular today occurs on the tree Prunus amygdalus. It prefers a Mediterranean climate with a cool winter. California “fits that bill” perfectly. In fact, California produces 80% of the world’s almond supply. One fall-back, however, is that almond trees require lots of water. California now holds the world record for production of almonds.
Classification
Kingdom Plantae
Clades 4 of them
Order Rosales
Family Rosaceae
Genus Prunus
Type Species P. amygdalus Batsch, 1801 [Linnaeus, 1753 was the first to name this tree, but in doing so, he created a “taxonomic tangle,” thus Batsch renamed this tree.
Note: (for those who are interested): the dietary evaluation of almond nuts (e.g. bought in a typical grocery store) have the following nutritional data:
Saturated fat [1]
Trans fat [0]
Polyunsaturated fat [4]
Monounsaturated fat [10] = healthy fats that help lower bad cholesterol (LDL)
The three images shown below are all via: PublicDomain Pictures.net
Monday, May 18, 2026
GRAY BIRD GRASSHOPPER
Gray Bird Grasshopper Schistocerca niten
It is a large insect, up to three inches long. This insect is native to North America: especially California to Texas and Mexico. It lives in deserts, woodlands, and mountains, can make powerful jumps that involve long-distance flight (several yards).
This kind of grasshopper is an omnivore, thus it eats vegetation (leaves, grasses, crops, fruits, vegetables) and small insects (e.g. aphids).
It can live year-around in some places (e.g., southern California---even in January).
Figures 1 and 2. Two Gray Bird grasshoppers (lengths about 3 inches) from Santa Clarita, southern California.
Reference. Wikipedia, 2026.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
THREE UNUSUAL BIRDS
THE EMU
This animal is a large flightless bird endemic (native) to most of Australia (in fact, it is Australia’s largest native bird). This bird is the second tallest flightless bird in the world today. As a bipedal runner, it can sprint up to 30 miles per hour. It has a very powerful kick, enough to deliver serious blows! It is also an excellent swimmer.
Figure 1. An adult emu. Image from the Smithsonian Institution (open access).
This bird eats fruits, leaves, grasses, flowers, seeds, and insects; it especially likes grapes and dandelion greens. The emu lives throughout most (but not all) of Australia.
The adult female is up to 6 foot three inches tall, and it weighs up to 82 pounds, whereas the male weighs a maximum of 69 pounds. This bird has unique fluffy, double-shafted feathers. It also has powerful 3-toed legs that can run up to 30 mph and are also used to deliver serious blows when it is necessary to protect itself or its young. This bird has a throat pouch for producing deep drumming calls. It is the only bird with calf muscles.
CLASSIFICAN
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Cordata
Class Aves
Order Casuariiformes
Family Casuariidae
Genus Dromaius
Type Species Dromaius novaehollandiae (Latham, 1790)
GEOLOGIC RANGE
They originated during the Late Oligocene or early/middle Miocene (about 25 to 15 million years ago) in Australia (Wikipedia, 2026).
Fossilized eggshells of Dromaius, about 65,000 years old, are frequently found in Australia.
KIWI BIRD
The Kiwi is a flightless bird (with vestigial wing approximately the size of a chicken. Kiwis are included in a diverse group of flightless birds generally referred to as ratites (e.g., ostriches, cassowaries, emus, rheas, moa, and the extinct elephant bird). The Kiwi bird is the national symbol for New Zealand.
Figure 2. Kiwi bird (image via the Smithsonian Institution, open access).
The Kiwi, which is endemic to New Zealand, consists of five recognized species. In general, the kiwi birds are up to 18 inches tall and weight about 5 pounds. The eye relative to body mass of the kiwi is the smallest in all of the avian species.
Kiwi birds are most closely related to the extinct elephant bird of Madagasgar.
Classification
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Aves
OrderApterygiformes
Family Apterygidae
Genus Apteryx
Type Species A. australis
The geologic time range of the kiwi is Miocene to Recent (Wikipedia, 2026).
Reference
Wikipedia, 2026
THE SANDILL CRANE
This bird used to be referred to as the “Grus Stork.” Today, there are six known subspecies of this bird. It lives today in North America (including Cuba) and also in northeast Siberia. It is a herbivore. The male weights up to 11 pounds and has a wingspan up to nearly 7 feet.
Figure 3. The Sandhill Crane, Image via the Smithsonian Institution (open access).
It has one of the longest fossil record of any extant bird: 10 million years [= late Miocene time] in Nebraska.
Classification
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Aves
Order Gruiformes
Family Gruidae
Genus Antigone
Type Species A. Canadensis (Linnaeus, 1758)
Reference:
Wikipedia, 2026.
