Photo by Supplied Photo /Suncor Energy
Prehistoric Fort McMurray was underwater
Most of Fort McMurray and Wood Buffalo’s history was underwater. For millions of years, it was the Western Interior Seaway. The ancient seaway stretched from the Yukon and Hudson’s Bay to the Gulf of Mexico.
Photo by Supplied Photo /Suncor Energy
The closest shoreline from what would become Fort McMurray was somewhere around the Alberta-Saskatchewan border. On land, temperatures were like the coast of Vancouver Island. The environment was forested, warmer and covered in ferns. There were no flowering plants and grass did not exist.
The continents shifted and collided as time went on. The sea bisecting the continent drained into the Gulf of Mexico as the crashing plates formed the Rocky Mountains.
“This presents very unusual preservation conditions,” Henderson said in a statement. “It’s so rare for things to become fossils, especially big things such as marine reptiles and dinosaurs. It’s only the fact that we’re shifting so much rock here that we’re fortunate to see this small piece of fossil.”
The plesiosaur’s final resting place will be in Drumheller at the Royal Tyrell Museum. It arrived at the museum using a similar method to transport a human bone cast. This allows a close fit of plaster to protect the fossil without touching the bone.
“I’m really excited because if the fossil ends up being displayed at the museum, I’ll get to show my one-year-old son what mom found,” said Plamondon. “Not every shovel operator gets to find one, so it’s pretty cool that I’m one of the few.”
The first major marine reptile fossil was found at Syncrude in 1994. Dozens of other plesiosaurs have been found in the oilsands. A different long-necked marine reptile called an elasmosaur was found in 2012 during construction of the Parsons Creek Interchange.
The most significant find was at Syncrude’s Millennium Mine in 2011 when the preserved remains of a nodosaur, an armoured land-based dinosaur, was found.
Paleontologists believe the nodosaur drowned in a flood 110 million years ago and was swept out to sea. Gases in the rotting corpse kept the belly-up carcass floating and the armour acted like a ship’s hull. The bloated carcass burst, sank and landed in what would later become the Millennium Mine. It is currently the best preserved fossil of an armoured dinosaur.