Title of article :
Hidden Fossils of the Hondsrug Complex Connect Time and Space
Author/Authors :
Huisman, Harry Hunebedcentrum Borger - Hunebedstraat 27 - 9531 JV Borger, The Netherlands , Roelfs, Margaretha Stichting De Hondsrug UNESCO Global Geopark - Hunebedstraat 4A, The Netherlands
Abstract :
The Hondsrug UNESCO Global Geopark in the northeast of the Netherlands comprises
the Hondsrug-complex, a prominent range of low till ridges created by forces
of moving land ice and melt water. The unusual orientations of the ridges contrast
with the usual direction of ice flow, and they are separated from each other by elongate
depressions. The area shows a strong cultural history, in which neanderthals
encamped about 50,000 years ago, reindeer hunters roamed, and the area is famous
for dozens of dolmens, burial mounds and prehistoric Celtic fields. The land ice
left behind thick layers of till, scattered with billions of erratic boulders that often
contain fossils. But this is a special case because the fossils are ‘hidden’ in erratic
blocks, and testify to Earth history thousands of miles north in the Baltic Sea and
millions of years earlier, in the Paleozoic. The Geopark can teach not only the local
geological, cultural and natural heritage but also geology and life far beyond.
Keywords :
Saalian , Hondsrug Icestream , Megaflutes , Baltics , Till , Palaeozoic corals , Education
Journal title :
Geoconservation Research