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| Paleontologist James Walker holds a Megalodon shark tooth found at the Calaveras Dam replacement project in Fremont, Calif. [Credit: AP/Bay Area News Group, Aric Crabb] |
Scallops, clams, barnacles and the teeth of an extinct hippopotamus-like creature called a Desmostylus have all been dug up since 2011, when work on the project began.
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| The fossilized spine of a whale is photographed on a hillside at the Calaveras Dam replacement project in Fremont, Calif. [Credit: AP/Bay Area News Group, Aric Crabb] |
Crews have discovered nine whale skulls. Plant fossils and fossils of animal tracks and burrows have also been discovered.
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| A scallop fossil is photographed on a hillside at the Calaveras Dam replacement project in Fremont, Calif. [Credit: AP/Bay Area News Group, Aric Crabb] |
The reservoir created by the Calaveras Dam is among several local reservoirs that supply the region. The dam, completed in 1925, is being replaced with one more capable of withstanding earthquakes.
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| An EarthCam shoots the progress of the Calaveras Dam Replacement Project [Credit: Water System Improvement Program Sunol Valley] |
Paleontologists will continue working with construction workers for the next few years. The fossils eventually will end up at a museum in the Bay Area, according to officials from the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, which is building the dam.
Source: Associated Press [July 07, 2014]









