2019 Experience the Mountain parks

Page 54

Experience the Burgess Shale

Photo Courtesy of Bookman’s Travel Reports

Photo Courtesy of Burgess Shale Geoscience Foundation

As we climb higher and higher up the mountainside, the views of Takakkaw Falls just keep getting better and better. We stop often to rest, snap photos, and gaze at the torrent of water plunging down the sheer rock wall that towers over everything. The trail is steep and rocky and not for the faint of heart. But this was not a surprise. Our group of 12 wide-eyed explorers seems up for the challenge. And, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, keeps us moving onwards and upwards. Located at an elevation of 2,286 m near the town of Field, the Walcott Quarry is one of the most important fossil deposits in the world. It is the most famous of the three Burgess Shale sites that you can visit in the region. Situated high on a mountainside in Yoho National Park, it was also designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1980. Charles Walcott, a paleontologist, discovered the Burgess Shale in 1909. Not surprisingly, given the strange fossils and the sheer number he found, he visited again the next year. Then the next. In fact, Walcott visited the site virtually every year until his death in 1927, at the age of 74. By that time, he had collected over 65,000 fossils while categorizing the strange specimens, most of which had never been recorded before. In the 1960s, after a thorough reinvestigation of the site, it was discovered that Walcott had barely scratched the surface into

the significance and rarity of his findings. The fossils, many of which had little resemblance to modern life forms, were absolutely bizarre, like they were from another planet. Some of the creatures had five eyes, hose-like snouts, and walked upside down on symmetrical spines. Long story short, the other-worldly fossils of the Burgess Shale are from earth. And they are old. Very old. Way older than the dinosaurs! They date back 508-million years, from the middle Cambrian era. It’s believed they were exquisitely preserved (in black shale) because of the lack of oxygen. The soft-bodied organisms, some with recognizable fluids and the remains of other creatures inside of them, are, literally, everywhere on the sites. And there are only a few places on the entire planet where you can see and photograph them. Not surprisingly, when you visit any of the Burgess Shale sites you cannot take anything away. It’s against the law. However, visitors are allowed to photograph the specimens and make paper copies, or imprints, of the fossils when they visit. While the Walcott Quarry, which requires a difficult day-hike to get to, is the most famous of the Burgess Shale sites, Parks Canada offers additional tours to two other amazing Burgess Shale sites. (You cannot visit any of the sites on your own. They are protected, and you must visit with a guide.)

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Articles inside

Experience the West Kootenays

1min
page 64

Experience Glacier National Park

1min
page 62

Experience Golden

2min
page 59

Experience Yoho National Park

1min
page 56

Experience the Burgess Shale

3min
pages 54-55

Headbanging in Radium Hot Springs

3min
pages 52-53

Experience the Fauna in the Mountain Parks

2min
page 49

Experience the Flora in the Mountain Parks

2min
page 48

Experience Wells Gray Provincial Park

1min
page 45

Experience Yellowhead County & Hinton

3min
pages 42-43

Canadian National Railway (CNR) 100th Anniversary

4min
pages 40-41

Experience Jasper National Park

2min
page 38

Experience the Icefields Parkway

2min
pages 33-34

Cycling the Icefields Parkway

3min
pages 30-31

Rocky Mountain High

3min
pages 28-29

Think Like an Artist

3min
pages 26-27

Experience Sunshine Meadows

2min
page 24

Elizabeth Parker: A Passion for the Alpine

3min
pages 22-23

Experience the Bow Valley Parkway

1min
page 21

Experience Mount Assiniboine

4min
pages 16-17

Experience Banff National Park

2min
page 15

Experience Waterton Lakes National Park

3min
pages 10-11, 14

Experience Cycling in the Mountain Parks

4min
pages 8-9
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