Indigenous interpretations . When the
Sioux lived around the
Great Lakes, they imagined their mythical Water Monster Unktehi as a large
aquatic buffalo-like
mammal. This image was likely derived from early observations of large
Pleistocene mammal fossils like
mammoths and
mastodons eroding out of the banks of local
lakes and
rivers. As some groups of Sioux began moving west into the regions that includes North Dakota their depictions of Unktehi tended to converge on the characteristics of local fossils. Although Unktehi continued to be described as horned, it gradually became imagined as
reptilian rather than the mammalian portrayals of the Sioux in the Great Lakes region, like the
dinosaurs and
mosasaurs of the region's Mesozoic rock. Unktehi was described as a
snakelike monster equipped with feet, like the elongate sinuous mosasaurs who had four short limbs. Its back was described as ridged and saw like, a configuration similar to the appearance of a fossil vertebral column eroding from rock. In more recent times Lakota storyteller James LaPointe has explicitly called Unktehi a dinosaur. The Sioux of the
Standing Rock Reservation, which straddles the border between North and
South Dakota, have a long history of familiarity with dinosaur
bonebeds. They interpreted the bones as the remains of monstrous, evil
serpents that tunneled underground.
Lightning continuously sought to kill the serpents and successful kills became numbered with the abundant local fossils. The lightning had been so devastating to the area that it was responsible for the conversion of the region to badlands and the Sioux avoid physical contact with the fossils out of fear that doing so might make themselves more likely to be killed by lightning.
Scientific research The first scientifically documented fossils in North Dakota were collected during the
Lewis and Clark Expedition between 1804 and 1806 as they mapped the course of the
Missouri River. The first fossil written about in the state were
petrified wood preserved in
sandstone concretions discovered at the
Cannonball River. In 1833 a German named
Alexander Philip Maximilian observed
leaf impressions preserved in sandstone in the upper Missouri River area. He thought the plants were similar to modern
phanerogammic plants still growing in the area. Maximilian collected a large number of them but in 1835 his fossils were destroyed near what is now
Bismarck in a fire on the steam ship transporting them. In 1843
John James Audubon collected fossils like petrified wood and
marine shells in the area but the specimens were of low quality. In the mid-19th century the US government began intensely
surveying the upper Missouri region. In the course of these surveys, a
geologist with the
Northern Pacific Railroad Survey named John Evans described the region between the
Sioux River and the
Falls of the Missouri as one of the best places in the world for collecting
Cretaceous and
Tertiary fossils. ''. Evans sent vertebrate fossils to
Joseph Leidy, who discussed the remains in a pioneering and historically significant series of publications. Among the most prominent figures in early North Dakota paleontology were Dr.
Ferdinand V. Hayden and Dr.
Fielding Bradford Meek.
New York geologist
W. James Hall became interested in North Dakota paleontology as a result of Evans and Leidy's research. Hall sent Hayden and Meek into the area. The expedition was a great success, with Hayden and Meek "collected an enormous quantity of fossils." Hall and Meek formally described their non-mammalian discoveries, while Leidy described their mammals. In 1883
Edward Drinker Cope made his first forays into North Dakota. Among his early accomplishments was the description of two new kinds of fish from the
White River Formation. The site of Cope's discovery attracted so much attention that all of its fossils had been collected and the site was "completely mined out." In 1905
Earl Douglass wrote extensively on behalf of the
Carnegie the fossils of the region near Cope's work. In the summer of 1963,
Charles I. Frye discovered a specimen of
Triceratops in the
Hell Creek Formation of
Slope County near the town of
Marmarth. It was regarded as the best
Triceratops skeleton ever found at the time. The excavation of the specimen was funded by many organizations at both the national and state levels. Among the excavators were Dr. Holland, Jack W. Crawford, and Michael F. Archbold from the Department of Geology at the
University of North Dakota at
Grand Forks. Marshall Lambert of
Ekalaka,
Montana was another participant. Between 1963 and 1966 several significant
Pleistocene mammal skulls were discovered in North Dakota and were described for the
scientific literature. ==People==