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DINOSAUR DREAMING 2008 updateThe “Dig Deep for Dinosaurs” auction held last November was an outstanding success. We received many donations, including a number of dinosaur paintings, dinosaur memorabilia and even some real fossils. Auctioneer, Marcus Alexander, not only donated his valuable time, but brought his family along to bid on a number of items. The event was generously catered for by Inverloch Foodworks supermarket, Steggles chicken and Cadbury, and wine flowed courtesy of Red and White wine distributors. All in all it was a great day and raised enough to fund the Dinosaur Dreaming 2008 field season. Thankyou to everyone who participated in our one and only auction. Preparation and research into the fossil bones and teeth found during the Dinosaur Dreaming 2008 field season has produced some interesting results: More than 700 fossils were catalogued during the six week dig at Inverloch, including three more mammal jaws. Two of the jaws belong to the monotreme group Teinolophos. One in particular is very interesting as it contains features that are not present on the other Teinolophos specimens. Dr. Tom Rich is currently researching this specimen. This year was our 15th consecutive annual field season at the Flat Rocks site near Inverloch. In the last fifteen years we have found hundreds of turtle bones and shell fragments, but never a complete skull – until this year. One of the many bones that was recovered this year was badly damaged during extraction and it wasn’t until it was being prepared that it became clear as to what it was – a turtle skull with no reduction in the back of the skull as you see in modern turtles. This specimen is going to be very important in linking all the turtle skull fragments we have found in the past. Some very nice ornithopod (small, plant-eating dinosaurs) bones were found this year also, including two tibiae and a femur. We also recovered the most complete ornithopod maxilla (upper jaw) to be found in the Strzelecki Group. It contains four erupted teeth and five unerupted teeth, as well as possibly part of the jugal. Preparation of this specimen is taking place at Museum Victoria. During the dig we made a mould of the large theropod dinosaur footprint that was found last field season by Tyler Lamb. We had to wait for a day when the tide was very low and the weather was fine so we had plenty of time to pour the silicone rubber. The mould has been taken back to the Museum where casts can be made. It was decided that the rock in which the footprint occurs is too cracked and friable to try and remove the footprint without damaging it. The six week dig is not the only work carried out by the Dinosaur Dreaming project. Throughout the year a dedicated group of volunteers prospect the south coast of Victoria looking for newly exposed fossils. Mike Cleeland, a geologist from Phillip Island, usually leads the prospecting trips and has an eagle eye for spotting fossils in the rock. This year he and his group have found some very interesting specimens along the Bass Coast between San Remo and Inverloch, including the largest and smallest vertebrae of an extinct group of amphibians that looked like giant salamanders (Koolasuchus cleelandi). |
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