Ancient shark skeleton, hidden in Manitoba museum's collection for 40 years, may be 1st of its kind - Action News
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Manitoba

Ancient shark skeleton, hidden in Manitoba museum's collection for 40 years, may be 1st of its kind

The skeleton of an ancient shark that could be the first of its kind is now on display at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, Man. and it was only recently "rediscovered" after sitting in the museum's collection for decades.

'Highly possible that we are talking about a new species,' says director of Morden's Fossil Discovery Centre

The large skeletal remains of an ancient shark are seen embedded in half of a plaster jacket.
'Dave,' the nickname given to a shark fossil now on display at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in the southern Manitoba city of Morden, could be a new species, says executive director Alfonso Cuetara. (Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre)

The skeleton of an ancient shark that could be the first of its kind is now on display at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centrein Morden, Man. and it was only recently"rediscovered" after sitting in the museum's collection for decades.

"It's a very special shark for many reasons," Adolfo Cuetara, the fossil centre's executive director, told Weekend Morning Showguest host Bryce Hoyein an interview. "It's highly possible that we are talking about a new species."

Because of that, the shark has not been given a scientific name yet, said Cuetara. It'sunofficially been named "Dave," in honour of the owner of the farm just west of Morden where it was found nearly 50 years ago.

The centre found Dave in its collections room eight years ago, though the shark fossilhad been there for much longer.

"It was discovered in 1975, but it was just hidden in the collections room for more than 40 years," said Cuetara.

An image of a large shark is seen next to the fossil skeleton of the shark.
Dave has been on display at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre since March. The fossil was unearthed in 1975, but was hidden in the centre's collection until a few years ago. (Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre)

It was wrapped up in a plaster field jacket in a safe in the museum's collection room, and "nobody was thinking that there was something special in there," Cuetara said.

He explained thatmuseums sometimesdon't have the capacity to comb through every piece in their collectionsbut a few years ago, museum employees decided to open the plaster jacket up to see what was inside, and were surprised to discover it was a shark.

After rediscovering the fossil, Dave was finally put on display in the museum.

Dave is nearly four-and-a-halfmetres (15 feet) long and is one of the biggest, best-preserved shark skeletons in the world, Cuetara said.

Complete shark skeletons are difficult to find because they are made up of soft cartilage, which does not preserve well, he said.

Dave is a filter-feeder shark with no teeth who got his nutrients by absorbing them out of the water, said Cuetara.

After finding the fossil, the centre dedicated the last few years to preparing a display for Dave, which launched earlier this year.

LISTEN |Morden's Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre wants to see you this summer!

Cuetaranow hopes an upcoming scientific paper willclear the mystery around the species of the shark.

"There's research underway right now," he said. "Probablyit's going to be a new species, but we have to wait for the scientific paper."

More changes at Morden museum

The fossil discovery centre in Morden a city of 10,000 in southern Manitoba is no stranger to bigattractions.

It's long been home to "Bruce," believed to be the world'slargest publicly displayed mosasaur a type of marine reptile dominant during the later age of the dinosaurs, around 80 to 66 million years ago.

The museum also says it has Canada's largest collectionof marine reptile fossils.

A skeleton of a prehistoric reptile is seen in a museum.
Bruce the mosasaur was found in Thornhill, just west of Morden, in a farmer's field in 1974. It's now on display at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

After more than two years of pandemic disruptions, the fossil centre is once again welcoming visitors, with about 500 students coming through so far this season, Cuetara said.

The return of visitors is coinciding with a few new expansions at the museum, which is currently housed in the basement of the city's Access Event Centre.

The fossil museum is nowin the preliminary stages of building a new standalone facility, Cuetara said. The new40,000-square-foot facility will focus on a more interactive experience for visitors using technology, projections and movement sensors, straying fromwhat many think of as the standard model for a museum.

"People don't maybe learn in that classical way anymore,"said Cuetara. "Or maybe there's just more ways of learning."

The centre is alsobuilding a 45-hectare (110-acre) field station inthe Manitoba escarpment around the Morden area, where the centre conducts its excavation work during the May to October field season.

The new field station will offer day camps for kids ages five to 12, Cuetara said. Construction of the field station will finish at the end of this summer in preparation for centre's popular dig tours in 2023.

The centre has also developed an interactive collection management system that will let the public virtually explore 20,000 fossils from over 1,500 different species.

"We are uploading thousands of photos, thousands of papers," said Cuetara. "You can go through the collections room virtually."

LISTEN |A unique fossil shark skeleton is being unveiled in Morden this week:

With files from Bryce Hoye