Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 28
11-Year-Old Boy Finds 1.8-Million-Year-Old Elephant Molar on UK Beach
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 28

11-Year-Old Boy Finds 1.8-Million-Year-Old Elephant Molar on UK Beach

1 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 28

Summary

  • Charlie Orchard-Lisle, 11, found a 4-inch-wide fossil tooth near the shoreline at East Lane beach in Bawdsey, Suffolk, during a family walk in May.
  • Experts later identified it as an upper left molar from Anancus arvernensis, an extinct relative of modern elephants whose enamel was preserved and mineralized over about 1.8 million years.
  • Eleanor Orchard-Lisle said the family spotted the unusual rock-like object by the waves and quickly realized it felt different from ordinary beach stones.
  • The family believes erosion may have released the tooth from a nearby Red Crag cliff, a fossil-rich formation along England's eastern coast, before it washed onto the beach.
  • The find adds to a recent run of child-led discoveries, including a Viking-age sword found by Norwegian first-graders and a 1,700-year-old Roman statuette fragment found by an 8-year-old in Israel.

Insights

What happens to a million-year-old fossil after a child finds it on the beach?
As climate change erodes coastlines, what lost worlds are being unearthed on our beaches?