Brian Roebuck
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Caver
Caving - the one activity that really brings you to your knees!
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Post by Brian Roebuck on Dec 9, 2007 9:45:28 GMT -5
Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News Buried Treasure Dec. 3, 2007 -- Divers exploring a water-filled sinkhole in the Bahama Islands recently recovered one of the world's largest and most pristinely preserved collections of animal and plant fossils from a tropical island. Like a time machine, the fossils reveal in stages what ecosystems were like on the island of Abaco from periods between 12,000 to 1,000 years ago. "Their ultra-high quality of preservation puts the fossils in a category all their own," David Steadman, who led the project and is curator of ornithology at the Florida Museum of Natural History, told Discovery News. "The potential for future analysis involves physical as well as chemical analysis," he added before explaining that stable isotopes, or atomic particles, can show what certain species ate, allowing scientists to reconstruct entire ecosystems. The "blue hole," called Sawmill Sink, is a water-filled void in limestone bedrock that's open at the surface. The water, depleted of oxygen, necessitated special diving equipment and methods. The divers wore "mixed gas rebreathers," closed-circuit devices that don't release exhaled air bubbles. This prevents bubbles from disturbing the site's unique water chemistry, while keeping the bubbles from whipping up clouds of bacterial mats, which could obscure visibility. dsc.discovery.com/news/2007/12/03/tropical-island-fossils.html
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