The discovery of a 86 million-year-old fossil of a rare species of oyster, has once again re-confirmed the presence of marine life and sea in central India.
Verma said fossils was discovered when was carrying out fieldwork for the proposed National Dinosaur Fossil Park to be set up in Dhar district. He said this is not the first time evidence of marine life and sea was found in this region. "In 2012, we discovered around 6.5 crore years to more than 10 crore-year-old fossilized teeth and bones of three generations of shark at Bagh belt in Dhar," said Verma, who discovered several dinosaur fossils from the region.
Assistant professor of Howrah College of Engineering, Tapas Gangopadhya, who had done extensive work on fossils of the region, said he too had found fossil of shark's predecessor at Bagh Belt around few years back. "The fossils of star fish and other marine life discovered here are yet to be identified as most of them are extinct. They were considered to be the earliest species of life. Fossils of shark and many other species have also been found which suggest the area was under sea," he said. The Narmada valley is very rich in fossils, but unfortunately they were not being preserved, he added.
Ashok Sahani, senior scientist of Centre for Advance Study in Geology and an internationally acclaimed authority on fossils, said Narmada Valley fossils can unravel myths about the evolution and civilization. A thorough research would also challenge the existing theory of evolution. Proper and extensive research may unfold the mystery." The rarest and most significant is the inter-trappian fossil which, if studied properly, can throw light on early life on earth.
Author: Bagish Jha | Source: The Times of India [March 10, 2015]
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