The Globe and Mail: Rare duck-billed dinosaur fossil destroyed by vandals in Alberta
Paleontologists were thrilled when they found the fossilized remains of a
duck-billed dinosaur in northwestern Alberta last month.
But joy turned quickly to despair when they returned to the site
near the Red Willow River a few days ago and found that vandals had smashed the
Hadrosaur skeleton to pieces.
he Pipestone Creek Dinosaur Initiative says the fossil was
discovered by paleontologist Phil Bell and a University of Alberta team on June
15.
They partially prepared it for removal, then reburied it for
protection until it could be fully removed later this month.
Bell returned to the site on Thursday and found the specimen —
which was about one meter long and 80 centimetres wide — had been destroyed.
“We still know very little about the dinosaurs that existed up
here so every skeleton is crucial,” Bell said in a statement.
“Each bone is irreplaceable.”
RCMP say they are investigating but don’t have any suspects. They
say a number of fossils had either been removed or destroyed at the site.
The group says it is at least the fourth act of fossil poaching
and vandalism in the region in the last month and a half.
At Pipestone Creek Park in the region, a bone bed has been
harmed, and in late May, a Plexiglas cover protecting and showcasing several
fossilized bones was smashed.
In later incidents in June, a vertebra and several rib bones were
stolen.
The group says the University of Alberta and the Royal Tyrell
Museum are also helping in the case.
The group says it is illegal to alter, mark or damage
palaeontological resources under the Historical Resources Act. Offenders may
face up to $40,000 in fines or a year in prison.
Bell said the destroyed fossils are beyond having monetary value,
adding that he considers them priceless.
“They are irreplaceable historical artifacts and illegal to
sell,” he said.
However, a Tyrannosaurus bataar fossil which U.S. government
seized last month on the grounds that it is alleged to have been fraudulently
imported, previously fetched $1.052 million at auction. The bones were
discovered in Mongolia in 1946, and Mongolia hopes to have them eventually
returned there.
In May, Bell stated in a blog post about the Mongolian case that
in the last 10 years, fossils have been disappearing at alarming rates.
“Recently, it has come to our attention that the illegal sale of
dinosaur fossils on the black market is reaching new lows,” Bell stated on the
Pipestone Creek Dinosaur Initiative’s blog.
“What’s worse, huge public auctions in the United States are
creating a demand for these priceless treasures,” he added.
Police are asking anyone with information about the latest
incident to contact them.
A team of local volunteers had been organized to remove the
fossil using quads and winches next week.
Bell said the Hadrosaur would have warranted a major exhibit in a
new museum that’s planned for the area, scheduled to open next summer in
Wembley, Alta.
“It’s a tragedy not only for our science but for the whole
community that will benefit from the new museum,” he said.
Sunday, July 8, 2012
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