Fossil found on P.E.I. older than first dinosaur to have walked the Earth
Lisa Cormier was walking her dog down a familiar path on the beach at Cape Egmont, P.E.I., last month looking for sea glass when she spotted what looked like intertwined branches. A closer look revealed something much more shocking — a more than half-metre-long rib cage with a spine and a skull buried in Prince Edward Island’s characteristic red earth.
“The entire skeleton was there,” said the school teacher in a recent interview.
Her mother-in-law, Cormier said, had told her that the Island’s sand lends itself to being a good home for fossils, and that her daughter-in-law had a good chance of finding petrified remains during one of her beach walks.
She laughingly dismissed the idea at first, but said her mother-in-law was the first to see a photo of her discovery.