Tuesday, November 5, 2019
This morning we hung at the campground and got some laundry and school done before heading into Los Angeles.

Then we headed into Los Angeles to the La Brea Tar Pits. These are located right in the middle of LA!

From brittanica.com:
La Brea Tar Pits, tar (Spanish brea) pits, in Hancock Park (Rancho La Brea), Los Angeles, California, U.S. The area was the site of “pitch springs” oozing crude oil that was used by local Indians for waterproofing. Gaspar de Portolá’s expedition in 1769 explored the area, which encompasses about 20 acres (8 hectares). The tar pits are thick, sticky pools of viscous asphalt (the lowest grade of crude oil) that has oozed to the surface from a large petroleum reservoir. They have yielded the fossilized skulls and bones of trapped prehistoric animals as well as one partial human skeleton and many human artifacts. Until the 1870s, scientists studying the tar pits believed that the animals found trapped in the tar were of recent origin. Interest in the area became intense at the turn of the 20th century, however, when the remains of an extinct giant ground sloth were found. Excavations, which continue, have also uncovered the remains of other Pleistocene mammals such as the imperial mammoth, the mastodon, the short-faced bear, the sabre-toothed cat (California’s official state fossil), and the camel; seeds, insects, and fish have also been unearthed. Park exhibits include life-size figures of many such long-extinct creatures and an observation pit. The Page Museum at the La Brea Tar Pits, an arm of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, contains more than one million prehistoric specimens exhumed from the pits.
Tar pits ooze crude asphalt from petroleum deposits below the surface. They actually bubble up on the surface. This ooze is about the size of a dinner plate.

You may wonder how large animals got stuck and died in these tar pits.


Here is a chart of all that has been recovered so far from this site:

Old photo of the tar pits in front and oil wells in the distance.





All of these dire wolves were excavated from the tar pits. They came to scavenge on the bodies of the large animals that got stuck and got stuck themselves. Bones of many scavenger birds have also been dug from these pits.


Columbian Mammoth skull (which we’ve also seen in Waco, Texas).

Tusks


Here is a chunk of asphalt with fossils on display in the visitor center.

This is an active pit that they are excavating. It’s really dirty work!

Here is the process:


There are these fences all over the park where seeps have sprung up in the grass.


After the Tar Pits we headed to the beach. Muscle Beach on Venice Beach. We’ve seen footage of ninjas on ninja obstacles on the beach.




We figured out we were at the wrong beach as there weren’t a lot of ninja obstacles here so we headed over to Santa Monica beach.
Nailed it!!
Caught the sunset.


After sunset, we walked the Famous Santa Monica Pier…the end of historic Route 66.



Origin of Popeye the Sailor Man

Stopped and had burgers at the last burger place on Route 66.

Loving the journey…