Early Study , the species described by Jacob Green in 1832 as “Calymene bufo''” One of the first people who may have described the scientific importance of the Windom was
Jacob Green. In his book
A monograph of the trilobites of North America: with coloured models of the species, he mentions an abundance of “
Calymene bufo” in similar conditions to that of the Windom. Later on in 1935, David M. Delo’s “Revision of the Phacopid trilobites” would name the genus
Greenops in honor of Jacob Green’s work. In 1840, the geologist
Lardner Vanuxem first described the “
Hamilton Formation” in
Hamilton, New York. The American paleontologist
James Hall, would be very influential in early scientific examination of the Hamilton group. American geologist and malacologist,
Timothy Abbott Conrad would describe many species found in the shale today. The work of Hall, Vanuxem, Conrad and other geologists of the time would give the foundation of the study of the geologic context behind the Windom. The Windom shale was first named by the American geologist
Amadeus William Grabau in 1917. Paleobiologist
Gustav Arthur Cooper’s 1929 dissertation, “The Stratigraphy of the Hamilton Group of New York” was another very influential work to the study of the Windom shale.
Penn Dixie Fossil Park and Nature Preserve A major site for the Windom shale would be the “Bay View Quarry” (Known more commonly today as the Penn Dixie site), opened sometime in the 1930s by the Bessemer Cement and limestone company. They would operate the quarry due to the Windom shale’s use as an ingredient in cement. Ownership of the quarry would be transferred to the Federal Portland Cement company sometime in the 1940s. In the late 1950s the Pennsylvania-Dixie cement company acquired the quarry. During the 1970s the Bay View Quarry would go abandoned. Over the 30 years the quarry was abandoned, it built a reputation among educators for its well preserved fossils. When the
Town of Hamburg purchased the abandoned quarry with the intention of turning it into a waste dump, lobbying efforts stepped in. The lobbying efforts merged to become the Hamburg Natural History Society, Inc., and successfully purchased the site in 1993 for its preservation. The site is today open to the public as the Penn Dixie fossil park and nature preserve. ==Geologic Context==