ADD FAVORITES

 

BOOKMARK US




Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

RSS FEEDS

Get our news delivered directly to your desktop-free

Who's Online

We have 8 guests online

USER STATISTICS

680 registered
1 today
1 this week
2 this month

Visitors Counter

Today4039
Yesterday5308
This week9347
This month103486
All4095668
Data since November 3, 2008
1691 Newsletter Subscribers

Announcement

Dear Visitors,

Archaeology Daily News is an Amazon Associates Program member.You can buy archaeology related books securely at our Amazon Bookstore by clicking the Bookstore menu item on the vertical menu in the left of our webpages (Link: Archaeolody Daily News Bookstore).

Archaeology Daily News earns revenues from Amazon book sales.

We will make donations to UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund) for 50% of our Amazon earnings. We will publish our donations at Archaeology Daily News.

Thank you very much for your support!

Best Regards,

Archaeology Daily News



Whale fossil found at San Diego Zoo E-mail
September, 18 2010
 

This page is viewed 1912 times

Los Angeles Times

The large skeleton, dated at about 3 million years old, is discovered when an excavating machine digging a hole for a storm water runoff tank makes a distinctive scraping sound.

Paleontologists Brad Riney, Gino Calvano, Christopher Plouffe and Joe El Adli, all with the San Diego Natural History Museum, excavate a 3-million-year-old whale fossil at the San Diego Zoo. Construction workers were digging a storm-water runoff tank when Calvano found the 20-foot-long skeleton

The San Diego Zoo has about 4,000 animals - all carefully catalogued.

For at least a few more days, it will have one more that officials didn't even know existed until Thursday, when an excavating machine digging a hole for a storm-water runoff tank made a distinctive scraping sound.

Gino Calvano, a paleontologist at the San Diego Natural History Museum, acting as a fossil monitor on the project, heard the sound and came running. He looked at the machine operator.

"I just kind of made eye contact with him," Calvano said. "He knew right away that I had heard something big."

Calvano realized that the machine's metal scoop had scraped a large fossilized skeleton. A quick inspection determined the skeleton was that of a whale from about 3 million years ago.

Work was stopped and, in accordance with state law, paleontologists from the nearby museum in Balboa Park quickly assembled.

By Friday, the squad was carefully chipping, dusting and digging in preparation for the skeleton to be encased in plaster and taken back to the museum for additional study. Meanwhile, work on the storm-water project resumed.

Paleontologists had expected that digging at the site, tucked just inside the zoo fence between California 163 and the park's Polar Bear Plunge, would uncover some shells, maybe some shark teeth. But finding a whale fossil, particularly one 20 feet long and largely intact, was unexpected.

"A lot of times the skull gets separated after the animal dies," Calvano said

There have been older fossils discovered in the region, some of which are on display at the museum. Among them: a femur found in Carlsbad from a duck-billed dinosaur that roamed the region 75 million years ago, and portions of a sea cow found in Chula Vista that were dated at about 3.5 million years old.

Still, the discovery of the whale fossil is additional proof that despite the civic self-image of San Diego as a place where everything is new, the truth is somewhat different.

"The people are new," said Sarah Siren, the museum's paleontology field manager on site. "The whales have been here the whole time."



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! JoomlaVote! Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! Yahoo! Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!

Related News:



Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.9 © 2007-2013 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >



Archaeology Daily News published 8523 news articles since November 3, 2008

Today's News

May 05, 2013 News 
 

MOST VIEWED NEWS



MOST EMAILED NEWS

MOST COMMENTED NEWS

© 2013 Archaeology Daily News