The Joggins Fossil Cliffs
The fossil cliffs of Joggins are a world-class
palaeontological site located near the head of the Bay of Fundy. This area is subjected to
some of the world's highest tides, over 15 metres
(49 ft). The tidal action causes steady erosion of the 23 metre (75 ft) high cliffs,
constantly revealing new fossils. The cliffs have yielded fossils which give an
unprecedented glimpse into life during the Carboniferous
Period including a rich variety of flora, a diverse amphibian fauna, exciting Arthropleura
trackways and some of the world's first reptiles.
Discovery
The Joggins fossil cliffs became famous in 1851, when
Charles Lyell, author of "The Principles of Geology", and Sir William Dawson, author of "Acadian
Geology" and "Air Breathers of the Coal Period",
visited the site. Joggins was already known for its abundance of fossilized tree trunks
found in their original positions. When Dawson and Lyell examined one of these stumps,
they noticed tiny bones. These apparently insignificant bones turned out to be one of the
most important fossil finds in Nova Scotia. They were, in fact, the remains of one of the
world's first reptiles, and the first evidence that land animals had lived during the
"Coal Age".
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