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Eldon George : ウィキペディア英語版
Eldon George

Eldon Thomas George, ONS (born May 10, 1931), is a fossil collector and amateur geologist who has made many significant discoveries on the shores of the Minas Basin and the Bay of Fundy since he began his fossil and mineral hunting career in the 1940s. George found the world's smallest dinosaur tracks in 1984 near Parrsboro, Nova Scotia, Canada. His other finds include a wide variety of fossilized amphibian and dinosaur prints that were displayed, along with the world's smallest dinosaur tracks, at his Parrsboro Rock and Mineral Shop and Museum. One of them is a 17-inch (45-cm) track that may have been made by a primitive, two-legged, crocodile-like creature that was nearly 20 feet (6 m) long. George's other discoveries include a fossilized insect with three pairs of wings and a tiny horseshoe crab that supplies a missing link in evolutionary history.〔Order of Nova Scotia, Recipients - 2013 ()〕

George's interest in mineralogy led him to become an influential advocate for stilbite as Nova Scotia's provincial mineral.
Over the decades, George's discoveries and stories have been featured or mentioned in a wide variety of publications including the ''Christian Science Monitor'', ''New York Times'' and ''National Geographic''. He also appeared in the five-part CBC Television series Geologic Journey, narrated by David Suzuki.〔Zahl, Paul. "The Giant Tides of Fundy." ''National Geographic'', August, 1957. pp.153-192〕
==Life and work==

Eldon George was born in Parrsboro in 1931. His career as an amateur geologist began after his right arm was fractured in a fall when he was nine. His injury healed badly leaving him unable to take part in sports with other boys, so he began exploring the beaches and cliffs near his home collecting rocks and semi-precious stones and teaching himself gemology. He also began discovering a wide array of fossils.〔Thurston, Harry. (1994) ''Dawning of the Dinosaurs: The Story of Canada's Oldest Dinosaurs''. Nimbus Publishing Limited and The Nova Scotia Museum: Halifax, Nova Scotia.〕
In 1948, George opened his Rock and Mineral Shop and Museum in Parrsboro where he displayed his huge collection of mineral and fossil specimens until he sold his business and donated the collection in 2015 for a special display in Parrsboro's Fundy Geological Museum.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Eldon George sells Rock Shop business; Parrsboro museum plans exhibit to honour him )〕 In 1966, he helped organize the Rockhound Roundup, a yearly event that drew thousands of visitors to Parrsboro. Today, it has evolved into the annual Nova Scotia Gem and Mineral Show.〔Wagstaff, Andrew. ''George recognized for life's work'', Amherst News, The Citizen-Record, August 22, 2009〕

Eldon George's fossil discoveries altered scientific views. Until a few decades ago, most paleontologists did not see the Fundy shoreline as a rich source of fossils. George's many finds along with those of paleontologist Paul E. Olsen changed their opinions. On April 10, 1984, he made a discovery that drew the world's attention to Wasson Bluff, on the shores of the Minas Basin about eight kilometres from Parrsboro. George was riding along the shoreline on his all-terrain vehicle when he stopped behind an outcropping to take shelter from the wind. As he bent over his ATV to warm his hands, his experienced eye picked out what appeared to be tiny tracks. Using a jackknife, he gradually exposed five fossil trackways imprinted in a slab of sandstone measuring 16-by-14 inches (40-by-35 cm). At first, he thought the three-toed tracks had been made by a reptile, but Olsen identified them as dinosaur prints. They belonged to a theropod dinosaur about the size of a small bird such as a sparrow or robin.〔Atlantic Geoscience Society (2001)''The Last Billion Years: A Geological History of the Maritime Provinces of Canada''. Halifax: Nimbus Publishing.〕〔Lessem, Don (1992) ''Kings of Creation: How a New Breed of Scientists is Revolutionizing Our Understanding of Dinosaurs''. New York: Simon and Schuster.〕
In 1986, a scientific team that included Paul Olsen, discovered hundreds of thousands of fossils at Wasson Bluff, one of the biggest troves ever found.〔
Fossil discoveries on the Fundy shoreline are especially significant because they date from 200 million years ago, the boundary between the Triassic and Jurassic geological periods when about half of the Earth's living creatures suddenly became extinct giving rise to dinosaurs and the mammals that eventually succeeded them. Many of the fossils that date from that time remain hidden, buried under North American forests, farmland or cities. But, the relentless Fundy tides constantly expose them in the cliffs that Eldon George has spent a lifetime exploring. "The tides here are like 20,000 bulldozers," he says, "excavating and changing the land every day."〔Demont, John. "Fossils: There shall be no stone left unturned," ''Maclean's'', September 15, 2003.〕〔Durstling, Hans. "Fossil find may shed light on future." ''Toronto Star'', August 21, 1988, p.A16〕

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