The Peterborough Examiner

Parks Canada recovers 45 stolen fossils, levies big fine

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A Quebec resident has been fined $20,000 for taking 45 fossils from three national parks in the Rocky Mountains, including an internatio­nally known fossil site.

Parks Canada says in a news release that park wardens in Lake Louise, Alta., received a tip in 2020 from a member of the public about fossils being removed from the Burgess Shale, a significan­t fossil site. An investigat­ion that summer and fall led to a search warrant by Quebec wardens and police at a home in the Montreal area in November 2020. Officials say that search recovered 45 fossils, which were identified by an expert from the Royal Ontario Museum as originatin­g from sites in Jasper, Yoho, and Kootenay national parks.

They say most of the fossils came from the Burgess Shale Marble Canyon quarry, an area not accessible to the public, in Kootenay National Park in B.C.

The individual, whom Parks Canada has not identified, pleaded guilty to two charges in a Cranbrook, B.C., court last month and was required to return the fossils, pay the fine and serve a five-month conditiona­l sentence that includes a curfew.

“This is the largest fine that has been levied to date for the removal of fossils from the Burgess Shale and demonstrat­es the seriousnes­s of the offence and the importance of this site,” Parks Canada said Thursday in a news release.

The Burgess Shale is widely known as one of the most significan­t fossil sites in the world. It contains fossil evidence of some of the earliest animals that existed in the oceans more than 505 million years ago and was designated a UNESCO world heritage site.

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