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Internet Edition. July 26, 2008, Updated: Bangladesh Time 12:00 AM |
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Fossil's fear at Rajmahal hills
Agency A treasure trove of history preserved by nature for millions of years in eastern India is threatened with extinction. Plant fossils, scattered all over the Rajmahal Hills in Sahebganj district of Jharkhand state, are fast finding their way into the hundreds of crusher machines that are reducing them into stone chips to be used in road construction. Spread over approximately 2,600 sq km, the Rajmahal Hills are home to plant fossils dating back between 68 million years and 145 million years. Over the years, geologists and palaeobotanists from all over the world have visited the area for their research. Here, scientists could lay their hands on some of the rarest plant fossils ever conserved by nature. Examples of these Jurassic age plant fossils - known as Rajmahal Flora - are to be found in many museums across the globe. The Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany in the northern city of Lucknow also has an impressive collection. But this wonder of nature is fast disappearing and geologists say the fossils may soon all be gone. The state government of Jharkhand has given out a mining lease in the area to private companies who are practically blowing up the hills to obtain rocks, which are then crushed to make stone chips. "This is what is worrying us. The treasure which nature has conserved for millions of years would be wiped out in a matter of months if an immediate ban on stone mining is not imposed in the area," says Syed Raza Imam Rizvi, head of the geology department at Sahebganj College. "Those who have the mining lease are cutting down the hills. All the hills need to be conserved for research.
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