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"If this were a lagoon that dried up, you might see signs that ocean water evaporated," such as crystallized salt and gypsum in the rock, said Thewissen, who is not involved in the research. "On the other hand, if a giant wave or storm flung the whales onto shore, it would also have pushed the ocean floor around, and you would see scour marks in the rocks." Dating fossils is complicated, experts said, and it will be very hard to distinguish dates precisely enough to determine whether the whales all died simultaneously. The researchers have been told to finish their onsite studies so that fossils can be moved out of the path of the widened Pan American Highway, or Route 5, which is Chile's main north-south road. Many of the fossils have been transported in plaster coverings to the museum in Caldera. Researchers from Chile's National Museum of Natural History are also studying the fossils. Pyenson and his team are working quickly under tents to document the intact skeletons. With funding from the National Geographic Society, the Smithsonian team is using sophisticated photography and laser scanners to capture 3D images of the whales that can later be used to make life-sized models of them. Suarez, the paleontologist, had long known about the whale bones just north of Caldera
-- they could be seen jutting out of the sandstone ridge alongside the highway at the spot known as Cerro Ballena, or Whale Hill. When the road work began last year, the construction company asked him to monitor the job to avoid destroying fossils. "In the first week, about six or seven whales appeared," Suarez said. "We realized that it was a truly extraordinary site." The Chilean government has declared the site a protected zone, and Pyenson said he hopes a museum will be built to showcase the intact skeletons where they lie, in the same way fossils are displayed at Dinosaur National Monument in Utah and Colorado. Suarez thinks there are probably fossils of hundreds of whales waiting to be uncovered
-- enough to keep him working at this one spot for the rest of his life. "We have a unique opportunity to develop a great scientific project and make a great contribution to science," he said. ___ Online: Smithsonian researchers' blog: Chile's National Museum of Natural History (Museo Nacional de Historia Natural):
http://nmnh.typepad.com/pyenson_lab/
http://www.dibam.cl/historia_natural/
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