Medicine Hat News

‘Man, we found something:’ Six-year-old uncovers fossil find near Lake Diefenbake­r

- The Canadian Press

A failed search for meteorite fragments has turned into a big fossil find for a six-year-old girl in Saskatchew­an.

Lily Ganshorn was out with her dad Jon in an area around Lake Diefenbake­r in August when she spotted a big shale rock. Her father says Lily wanted him to break it and he happily obliged.

“As soon as we break it open, all of a sudden it’s like holy smokes ... it just started shimmering. I grabbed it, went out, washed the thing off and this thing is just almost glowing. It was so phosphores­cent,” Ganshorn said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

“And I’m looking at this thing and it’s like, man, we found something here.”

Ganshorn got in touch with the University of Saskatchew­an, which told him to send pictures.

In mid-September, paleontolo­gy graduate student Meagan Gilbert confirmed the find as an ammonite — a shelled creature related to a modern day squid or octopus.

Southern Alberta, southweste­rn Saskatchew­an, and an area stretching down into Montana were part of the Bearpaw Formation seabed about 75 million years ago.

That’s where the ammonite would have come from, said Gilbert.

“So you get a whole bunch of these little critters that would have been living at that point in time, that die on the bottom of the sea floor, and then you can find them as big blocks and stuff, because usually there were a lot of them living together,” she said.

Gilbert says ammonite fossils aren’t uncommon, but the size of the intact, undamaged ammonites the Ganshorns found is remarkable.

Ganshorn says after that first find, he and Lily started daily searches. They found little shells, mollusks and more ammonites. “Next thing you know, we’re sitting with like 50 or 60 of these things.”

One of the pieces is about the size of a bowling ball.

Another find appeared to be a mud and shale boulder about three-quarters of a meter in diameter, which, when split open, was riddled with well-preserved mollusk shells, he said.

“It looks like they almost came out of an aquarium yesterday, is how well these thing are preserved,” he said. “That’s been our most dramatic find we found this year. The ammonite was cool, but that last one, that boulder full of shells, was by far the most dramatic.”

On another weekend, Ganshorn’s nieces and nephews came, too, and the kids formed a dinosaur hunters club.

“It’s been a very exciting, educationa­l adventure, to say the least,” said Ganshorn.

 ?? CP HANDOUT PHOTOS JON GANSHORN ?? Top: Jon Ganshorn and his daughter Lily pose with a fossil. Lily, 6, wanted her dad to break up some muddy shale rocks along the shore of Saskatchew­an’s Lake Diefenbake­r. That led to the discovery of a fossil called an ammonite and the hunt for more.
CP HANDOUT PHOTOS JON GANSHORN Top: Jon Ganshorn and his daughter Lily pose with a fossil. Lily, 6, wanted her dad to break up some muddy shale rocks along the shore of Saskatchew­an’s Lake Diefenbake­r. That led to the discovery of a fossil called an ammonite and the hunt for more.
 ??  ?? Bottom: The ammonite fossil the Ganshorns found is seen in this undated handout photo.
Bottom: The ammonite fossil the Ganshorns found is seen in this undated handout photo.

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