Journal Pioneer

Islander gets old feet

Dimetrodon footprint fossil found along P.E.I.’s coast

- DANIEL BROWN

Laura MacNeil was looking for fossils along the north shore of P.E.I. last summer.

Near Cavendish, she noticed a large rock with a series of grooves impressed into it. They looked very different from other Island rock patterns.

She felt it with her hand.

“It looks just like a footprint,” she thought.

She was skeptical, so she studied it for about half an hour. She tried to convince herself it wasn’t a fossil.

“But I couldn’t. It looked too much like this was something very scientific­ally important.”

After a while, she ran back to her car to email the provincial government and Parks Canada to report what she believed was a dimetrodon’s footprint.

“And the rest is history.” MacNeil revealed her discovery at Sherwood Elementary School on Feb. 21. Premier Wade MacLauchla­n spoke at the event, and many Sherwood students were among the first to see the fossil.

It’s since been confirmed the footprint is from the dimetrodon family.

Dimetrodon­s were lizard-type creatures ranging from six to 15 feet long. They had a tall fin along their spines and walked on this prehistori­c Island during the early Permian Period.

That’s before the time of dinosaurs. The fossil is about 290 million years old, MacNeil said.

A big indication it’s a dimetrodon fossil is the footprint’s toes. They’re pointed at the end, suggesting the creature had claws, MacNeil said.

“Which usually means it was a predator, a meat-eater, a carnivore.”

MacNeil, a science educator at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontol­ogy in Alberta, said her experience at the museum made her curious about what she may find back home.

“It made me wonder what kind of fossils were on P.E.I.” she said. “I was pretty excited about finding something significan­t.”

This discovery is important because it’ll help paleontolo­gists better understand how dimetrodon­s lived.

A skeleton fossil can only show what happened to the creature after it died, MacNeil said.

“These footprints are representa­tive of a living creature and can tell us quite a bit about how they moved and behaved.”

This isn’t the first dimetrodon fossil found on P.E.I. In 2015, researcher­s published a paper suggesting they’re still learning about an Island fossil discovered in 1845.

When addressing the elementary students, MacLauchla­n compared fossils to pictures. Finding a fossil is like seeing a picture you’ve never seen before, he said.

“We have a few pictures today of what was going on in Prince Edward Island 300 million years ago.”

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Science educator Laura MacNeil points out the dimetrodon fossil’s patterns to Finance Minister Heath MacDonald and Parks Canada superinten­dent Karen Jans.
SUBMITTED Science educator Laura MacNeil points out the dimetrodon fossil’s patterns to Finance Minister Heath MacDonald and Parks Canada superinten­dent Karen Jans.

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