Chilean beachgoers become guardians of Elasmosaurus fossils
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[June 21, 2022]
SANTIAGO (Reuters) - While strolling along
Los Tubos beach on the central Chilean coast, a group of neighbors found
strange remains which turned out to be fossils of an ancient marine
reptile that lived in the surrounding sea millions of years ago.
Several fossils belonging to the long-necked sea creature from the Upper
Cretaceous period, known as Elasmosaurus, were found by Andrea Galvez
and other residents of the town of Algarrobo, some 95 kms (60 miles)
east of Santiago, the country's capital.
Galvez, a physical education teacher, said she usually collects plastic
she finds along the beach, but noticed something strange one day after
getting off her paddle board.
"I saw some strange rocks, one in particular that was different from all
the others," Galvez said. She later took the piece to a local museum.
The loss of sand from the beach due to erosion has allowed some fossil
remains, protected for millions of years, to surface.
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Jana Toscheva, another local, found a stone weighing
more than 50 kgs with bones of the extinct reptile.
Toscheva says she goes out nearly every day but rarely sees anything
noteworthy.
"Then I feel that it fell, almost from the sky, to tell me: please
save me, do something for me," Toscehva said. "I was practically
shivering, very nervous."
She added that she was happy because of the positive impact the
fossil could have for the area.
The curator of the Natural History Museum, Jose Luis Brito, said the
women had discovered more fossils than any of the paleontologists
who have visited the site over the years.
"It's incredible (...). They have become the guardians of the fossil
beach of Algarrobo," he said.
(Reporting by Rodrigo Gutierrez for Reuters TV; Writing by Steven
Grattan; Editing by Michael Perry)
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