Abstract

Dinosaur Provincial Park has been a popular site for palaeontological digs for many years. Over time, the many quarries and bone beds uncovered have had their locations marked on large paper topography maps. Unfortunately, many dig sites have been lost due to poor documentation. Some sites have been abandoned for years. The high erosion levels of the park (2 – 4 mm yearly) continually both destroys dig sites and uncovers new fossils. To help recover old, unused dig sites, the coordinates of the sites marked on the old paper maps were uploaded to Google Earth Pro for easy access. Unfortunately, the points had to first be transferred to clear mylar maps, because the original paper maps lacked longitude and latitude measurements. This was accomplished by matching the topography when the scale of the maps differed, and by overlaying the clear maps on the paper maps when they did not. The distance of each point from a line of longitude or latitude was found using a ruler (each mm measured on the map representing 10 m in the park) and used to calculate their coordinates. After the coordinates were found, they were recorded in a Google SpreadSheet. Once this was completed for all 462 points, they were uploaded to Google Earth Pro. The purpose of this project was to provide more easily accessible records of dig sites and prevent further record loss as the old paper maps age and their condition deteriorates. The massive paper maps are unwieldy and impractical to use in the field, and something more compact is needed. Google Earth is easily accessed on a computer or cell phone, and the points will not be lost due to physical damage, degradation, or misplacement of the records. In addition, it takes up far less space in digital form, and thus is better for field work than the original maps.

Highlights

  • Jaremco et al, 2019 albertaacademicreview.com ‘X’ Marks the Spot: Transferring Dig Site Coordinates from Supported By: Maps to Google Earth

  • To keep track of the various dig sites, quarries, and bone beds at Dinosaur Provincial Park (DPP), metal stakes with the site’s data on the head are drilled into the ground by the site (Leiggi and May 1994), and the location marked on a large paper map

  • We first sorted through the paper maps to find which ones had points on them

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Summary

Introduction

Record keeping of palaeontological dig sites has been unreliable; many quarries have been lost over the years (Tanke 2005). To keep track of the various dig sites, quarries, and bone beds at Dinosaur Provincial Park (DPP), metal stakes with the site’s data on the head are drilled into the ground by the site (Leiggi and May 1994), and the location marked on a large paper map. These maps are impractical to use in the field. To locate and record the sites more efficiently, the coordinates of the old points were taken and uploaded into Google Earth

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