| Greek professor Evangelia Tsoukala and her team at the excavation site in Chalkidiki [Credit: Greek Reporter] |
“The importance of the findings lies in the fact that there was a Savannah ecosystem in this area some six million years ago similar to those found in Africa today. We have so far unearthed hipparion remains, four bovidae species, antelopes, gazelles and giraffes. The most important finding remains to date the well-preserved skull of a five-million-year-old primate (Mesopithecus Pentelicus) that was found in 2006,” she said.
An Austrian professor from the University of Graz, Mathias Halzasek commented on the uniqueness of the geological phenomenon observed in the Cassandra peninsula. “There are many fossilized remains in the area that are well-preserved. We are most interested in sedimentology, which allows us to take a closer look into the ecosystem that once sustained these prehistoric animals,” he said. Further paleontological findings were also discovered in Samos, Nikiti, the island of Euboea, and Sidirokastro in Serres.
Author: Stella Tsolakidou | Source: Greek Reporter [September 05, 2012]





