Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Vertebrate Palaeontology & Biomechanics Labsite, UQ, The fight to save Western Australia's 'dinosaur coast'


Vertebrate Palaeontology & Biomechanics Labsite, UQ, The fight to save Western Australia's 'dinosaur coast'

The fight to save Western Australia's 'dinosaur coast'
The coastline of the Dampier Peninsula north of Broome in the west Kimberley preserves one the largest and most significant stretches of dinosaur track-sites anywhere in the world. There are literally thousands of footprints and trackways representing as many as 15 different types of dinosaurs, some of which there is no other record for in Australia. With the exception of a few fragments of bone, these tracks constitute the entire fossil record of dinosaurs in the western half of the Australian continent. Some of the sauropod tracks are over 1.5m long, and belong to what may have been some of the largest animals to have ever walked the planet.



In 2008 the State Government of Western Australia announced a proposal to exploit the liquid natural gas resources of the Browse Basin by installing a pipe-line and gas-processing plant at James Price Point, on the western coast of the Dampier Peninsula, approximately 40 km north of Broome. Dinosaur track-sites at James Price Point will be destroyed if the proposed LNG plant is allowed to go ahead, while others will likely be placed at risk from vandalism or theft from 6-8000 fly-in-fly-out workers that will descend on the area. Our understanding of this unique snapshot of a Mesozoic ecosystem will be severely compromised, and ancient aboriginal songlines will be broken forever.

Dr Steve Salisbury is now leading a campaign by concerned palaeontologists to help try and protect the Kimberley dinosaur track-sites from the proposed gas hub development at James Price Point. On 31 August 2011, the 200 km stretch of coastline along which the track-sites occur was included in a National Heritage Listing for the west Kimberley.

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