Penticton Herald

Fossil found on P.E.I. older than the first-ever dinosaur

- By HINA ALAM

Lisa Cormier was walking her dog down a familiar path on the beach at Cape Egmont, P.E.I., last month looking for sea glass when she spotted what looked like intertwine­d branches. A closer look revealed something much more shocking — a more than half-metre-long rib cage with a spine and a skull buried in Prince Edward Island’s characteri­stic red earth.

“The entire skeleton was there,” said the school teacher in a recent interview.

Her mother-in-law, Cormier said, had told her that the Island’s sand lends itself to being a good home for fossils, and that her daughter-in-law had a good chance of finding petrified remains during one of her beach walks.

She laughingly dismissed the idea at first, but said her mother-in-law was the first to see a photo of her discovery.

Eventually, however, that image made its way to John Calder’s phone.

The Halifax-based geologist and paleontolo­gist said the fossil likely dates back about 300 million years to the end of the Coal Age, or Carbonifer­ous era, and into the Permian period, about 80 million years before the first dinosaurs.

“My reaction when I saw that photo was ‘wow,’” he said. “This is obviously really important because these kinds of fossils are very rare from this time period. And, because of its location – it was being covered by the sea with every tide and at risk – it needed to be removed immediatel­y.”

The Carbonifer­ous era was a period of intense global warming, Calder said.

The rainforest­s and the wetlands of the Coal Age collapsed in the face of withering heat, he said. Only some creatures such as reptiles, which lay their eggs outside of water, were favoured to survive, he added.

Within 24 hours of Calder receiving the photo, a team had been assembled to retrieve the precious fossil. But they had just about five hours before high tide and sunset to get the specimen to safety.

Cormier said her husband, Gabriel, and father-in-law, Aubrey, along with Laura MacNeil, a geologist who runs Prehistori­c Island Tours, a company giving tours of fossil sites, helped Calder with the delicate dig.

The rock was soft and crumbly, Calder said. The team simply dug around it and excavated the rock with the fossil embedded in it. The team then wrapped the rock in layers of newspaper, burlap and plastic before carrying it to the back of a Parks Canada truck, which took it to a paleontolo­gical repository about 60 kilometres away in Greenwich, P.E.I., for safekeepin­g.

The Prince Edward Island government will then decide where it has to be sent, adding it will likely wind up in either Ottawa or Washington, D.C., for further study.

The fossil will reveal its secrets bit-by-bit, Calder said. While the skull and teeth will instantly reveal the lineage, he said a “full, proper descriptio­n” could take at least a year.

Cormier said she cannot wait to hear what the scientists find out about the fossil. “Maybe I’m making history. Maybe it will be named after me,” she said with a laugh.

Even if it is not a one-of-a-kind species, she said the fossil is a rare find.

“I will still be proud of finding it.”

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A fossil is seen in an undated handout photo.
The Canadian Press A fossil is seen in an undated handout photo.

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