Field Notes

A living archive for evidence and adventure.

Trackways, archaeology, Nevada history, science explainers, and respectful field stories organized so curiosity can go deeper.

Content hub

Explore the evidence.

Welcome to the field library. What begins as a short video in the desert can become a lasting resource where evidence, context, and clarity live side by side.

Close view of a fossil-style dinosaur footprint in red rock

Dinosaur trackways

Tuba City, Mill Canyon, Moab, Berlin-Ichthyosaur, La Brea, and other field stories organized into useful explanations.

Rock art symbols on a canyon wall

Archaeology

Canyon de Chelly, Chaco, petroglyphs, manos, metates, pottery, and cultural places approached carefully and respectfully.

Dino Doug standing in an open desert landscape

Science explained

Radiometric dating, fossil formation, packrat middens, evolution basics, Big Bang evidence, and how scientists test ideas.

A living archive

Every expedition can become a lesson.

Field notes

Short articles can turn each trip into an indexed, searchable page that helps families and teachers keep learning after the video ends.

Field ethics

Document the place, protect the place. Fossils, ruins, and rock art should remain where they are unless trained professionals are working under proper authority.

Myth checks

Use calm explanations to untangle misinformation around dating, fossils, evolution, and archaeology.

Future media library

Podcast episodes, video clips, printable guides, and photo galleries can all live here as the Dino Doug archive grows.

Field Location Starters

Turn Doug’s email/photo list into searchable Field Notes.

These are strong candidates for individual posts or location pages as the archive grows.

Ancestral stone structures

Canyon de Chelly

Cliff dwellings, canyon walls, snow scenes, Antelope House ruins, and respectful Indigenous history context.

Southwest ruins

Chaco Canyon

Great houses, alignments, engineering, trade, and the importance of careful archaeological interpretation.

Rock art symbols

Hopi Petroglyphs

Rock art should be presented with humility, protection language, and links to appropriate cultural authority where possible.

Canyon landscape

Grand Canyon

A powerful geology and deep-time location, useful for explaining rock layers, erosion, and why context matters.

Dinosaur track closeup

Trackways

Tuba City, Mill Canyon, Moab, and other track-bearing sites can become a structured trackway guide.

Dino Doug in canyon country

Museum Visits

San Diego museum and other museum trips can become family-friendly explainers about fossils, casts, and exhibits.