Ghughua Fossil Park

Ghughua Fossil Park is a National Park, located near Shahpura in Madhya Pradesh, India, in which plant fossils belonging to 31 genera of 18 families have been identified.[1]

Ghughua Fossil Park
TypeNational park
LocationMadhya Pradesh, India
Coordinates23°6′38″N 80°36′51″E

The site was founded during the 1970s by Dr. Dharmendra Prasad, a statistical officer of the Mandla district and honorary secretary of the district archaeology unit. It was declared a National Park in 1983.[2] Numerous plant, leaf, fruit, seed, and shell fossils can be found in this park, some of which dates as far back as 65 million years,[2] the most prominent of which are the palm fossils.[1]

Notable fossils

A eucalyptus fossil found at Ghughua is the oldest fossil of its type ever discovered and this find supports its origins from Gondwana.[3] Additional notable discoveries include a dinosaur egg fossil.[4]

Transportation

Ghughua Fossil Park is located near National Highway 11. It is situated 14 km from Shahpura and 76 km from Jabalpur.[1]

gollark: GCSE results are in five days, and people are complaining a lot about how they messed up A-levels.
gollark: I'm not really sure about what do after A-level, and am also vaguely unsure about my subject choices for that, but *oh well* (I technically can still change them, though).
gollark: I have no idea if you *need* it here, but university is quite popular.
gollark: I think that might be allowed too, actually? But you need to be in some sort of training thing.
gollark: You are not, apparently, legally allowed to do full-time work until you're 18, and must be in education/training of some kind.

See also

References

  1. "Fossil National Park Ghughua (65 Million Year Old Heritage)". National Information Centre. Archived from the original on 2013-02-25. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  2. Mishra, Girima (17 January 2010). "A dino egg and other fossils". The Indian Express. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  3. Anumeha Shukla, R.C.Mehrotra, Antariksh Tyagi. "Research Communications" (PDF). Current Science Vol 103. No.1. 10 July 2012. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  4. Kumar, Vikas (21 February 2011). "6.5 crore-year-old fossil in Ghughua". The Sunday Indian. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
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