ஆனால் உலகின் பல நாடுகளைச்சேர்ந்த புவியியல் நிபுணர்கள் மத்தியில் அரியலூரில் கிடைக்கும் ஆழ்கடல்வாழ் உயிரினங்களின் பாசில்ஸ் எனப்படும் படிமங்கள் மிகவும் பிரசித்தி பெற்றவை.
ஏறக்குறைய 60 ஆண்டுகளுக்கும் மேலாக பல்வேறு நிலவியல் மற்றும் கடலியல் நிபுணர்கள் இந்த படிமங்களை கண்டறிவதிலும், வகைப்படுத்துவதிலும், ஆராய்வதிலும் ஈடுபட்டுவருகிறார்கள்.
அதேசமயம், அரியலூரில் செயற்பட்டுவரும் சிமெண்ட் தொழிற்சாலைகளுக்கு தேவையான மூலப்பொருளை வெட்டியெடுக்கும்போது இந்த அரியவகை படிமங்களும் அழிவதாக கூறப்படுகிறது.
ARIYALUR FOSSILS
The Hindu 2-8-12
Picking up a stone that resembles an animal tooth, S.M.
Chandrasekar from Earth Park Trust in Ariyalur says, “This is probably the first
time someone has moved it since its formation in the Cretaceous period.” The
stone is a part of a huge accumulation of marine fossils that indicate that the
landlocked districts of Ariyalur and Perambalur were under the sea about 65 to
146 million years ago.
Walking on the seabed
Explaining that the limestone sediments at Ariyalur and Perambalur
were of a marine origin, geologist Chandrasekar says they were deposited there
by a rare geological event called marine transgression. “The only other example
of this phenomenon is found at Wales, United Kingdom,” he says.
The sea seems to have invaded the land between Puducherry in the
north to Karaikal in the south millions of years ago, stayed put for around 81
million years, and then for reasons unknown, seems to have regressed to its
present location. Having covered over one lakh hectares, the sea has left behind
fossilised traces of marine life making the region a geologist’s treasure
trove.
Cement city
The 25 kilometre stretch with a depth of 20 metres between Kadur
and Yelaakurichi villages in Ariyalur is said to be the deepest part of the
sea.
The limestone, gypsum and phosphatic nodule repositories here form
the primary source of raw material for a thriving cement industry.
“The eight major cement factories in Ariyalur alone, account for
nearly 80 per cent of Tamil Nadu’s cement production,” says Chandrasekar.
Consuming tones of limestone every day, the industries sometimes destroy rare
pieces of fossils as well. “The nearly 320 types of fossils found here are also
high grade limestone,” he says, “and the sedimentary deposits costs much less to
grind as against the metamorphic limestone deposits found elsewhere in the
state.”
Recently, Earth Park Trust has joined the district administration
in establishing a fossil gallery within the Collectorate. “I have already
acquired the 100 types of fossils for the gallery and we are inviting cement
factories as well as individuals to donate any rare fossils they might possess,”
he says.
Rare topography
An important indicator of the region’s geological past is the
surviving stretches of bad land topography, says Chandrasekar. Originally the
sea bed, the land has undulating dunes of sand that support thorny scrubs. But
over time, most of it has been flattened out for cultivation of cotton and a few
other crops. “The process of declaring the 25 acre bad land topography, between
Varanasi and Keelapazhur in Ariyalur, as a restricted area is already on,” he
says. The much larger site at Karai, falling under the Perambalur district, also
needs to be declared a geological monument, feels Chandrasekar.
The abundance of limestone is reflected in the construction of
houses, temples, mandapams and household items.
“Almost every house has a maatu thotti (water tank for cattle),
thiruvai, ammi kallu and ural (indigenous grinders) made from limestone so that
the calcium, dissolving into the food, indirectly enters their diet.”
The region has now captured the attention of international
geologists, paleontologists and students: dinosaur eggs, a petrified tree trunk
and several unaltered fossils of species make it a veritable field museum of the
Cretaceous and Jurassic periods.
“I hope to set up a natural museum of fossils at the Keelapazhur
site soon,” says Chandrasekar, who is also hopeful of getting a stamp released
on the Ariyalur fossils.