Chris Elmenhurst / Surf The Spot Photography
This photo makes the fossil look as big as a dinosaur, but it is actually about 8-10 feet.
Surfers normally make news when the "surf's up," but
this week in Santa Cruz the news was made when surfers noticed something
strange when the surf was down, as in a very low tide.
Santa Cruz surfers discovered a small
prehistoric skeleton Wednesday morning during a lower-than-usual low
tide at the base of a cliff at Pleasure Point.
Experts say the bones were the
vertebrae of a small whale that had been fossilized. It's not uncommon
to find fossils along the coast, but this creature is upright and
appears to be well preserved.
Gary Griggs, director of University of California Santa Cruz's Institute of Marine Sciences, told KSBW in Salinas that the skeleton was most likely an extinct Pliocene-era whale.
The Pliocene era was roughly 3 to 5 million years ago.
The bones were found just below the home of Jack O'Neill. O'Neill is known around the world for making wetsuits.
The surfers who made the discovery Wednesday were headed to a break water named "Jack's."
O'Neil is among the scores of people who checked out bones that date back to when dinosaurs ruled the world.
He says he never noticed it before
even though he has looked down at that part of the beach every day for
the past 40 years. "It's a new one," O'Neill told the Santa Cruz
Sentinel.
More of the creature is expected to be revealed over time, but experts are asking people to leave the bones as they lie.
The next lower than normal tide is not until mid-December. That is the next time the fossil is expected to give a good showing.
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