Frank Beckwith was the first person to appreciate and publicize the abundant Ordovician fossils at Fossil Mountain along with the abundant
Cambrian fossils around Antelope Springs. Around 1910, he started as a cashier at the first bank in the newly founded town of Delta. From
Delta, Utah, he and his friend, Charles Kelly, roamed the deserts of Utah and collected fossils and Native American artifacts. It was during this time that they recognized the abundance of well-preserved fossils at Fossil Mountain and around Antelope Springs. Beckwith named
Fossil Mountain because of the abundance of marine
invertebrate fossils found on its slopes. Both Beckwith and Kelly promoted Fossil Mountain and Antelope Springs to rockhounds and fossil collectors to encourage to visit and spend time in Millard County, Utah. Later, as editor of the weekly newspaper in Delta, Beckwith encouraged professional
paleontologists to study the Cambrian
trilobites found around Antelope Springs and Ordovician fossils found at Fossil Mountain. As a result, in the 1930s, the University of Utah geology department conducted regular student field trips to collect Ordovician fossils. Also, Charles E. Resser, Curator of Paleontology,
U.S. National Museum, visited Fossil Mountain in 1930, to conduct paleontological research. Beckwith also sent to the U.S. National Museum several collections of Ordovician fossils, including trilobites,
brachiopods,
ostracods,
gastropods, and
cephalopods, from Fossil Mountain. Of these fossils, Ulrich and Cooper (1938) formally described the Ordovician brachiopods. ==Geology==