Friday, May 3, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian Geologist Seeks Due Recognition For Canada Fossil Discovery

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Jul, 2016 01:30 PM
  • Indian Geologist Seeks Due Recognition For Canada Fossil Discovery
For geologist Shiv Balak Misra it's a moment of happiness wrapped with sadness. He's happy that his 1967 discovery of a fossil in Canada has been recognised by Unesco, but sadly his name has not been mentioned. Simply put, the contribution of an Indian seems to have been ignored.
 
Misra had discovered the fossil at Mistaken Point, Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada. The place is now better known as Mistaken Point Ecological Reserve. Unesco has recognised it as a World Heritage Destination last week.
 
Sitting at his modest flat overlooking the sprawling Ambedkar Park, Misra recalls his days in Canada. He is happy that the world body has recognised the work, which he undertook many decades back as part of his thesis work that shed light on beginning of life on earth some 560 million years ago. But his name doesn't find a mention.
 
He says it's not about his name as such but the fact that an Indian's contribution has been omitted. "It would have been a happier situation had the name been mentioned, as for generations to come a visit to the Reserve would have brought proud moments for Indians," he muses.
 
Greetings meanwhile have poured in -- from Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav and from hundreds of his admirers in the fraternity and people at large.
 
 
Recollecting the days he spent in Canada, Misra told IANS that when he chanced upon the fossils, the place was scantily populated and had only three families of workers at the Light House.
 
He had gone there to study "pre-Cambrian rocks", and the fossil discovery was a bonus. This was first published in 'Nature' -- a journal published from London.
 
Only after the discovery was published with photographs in an American journal in 1969 the world took note of it as a very serious and significant discovery.
 
In an honour to Misra for his discovery, the 565 million year old fossil was named in September 2007 after him: Fractofusus misrai 
 
The site he points out was very crucial for educational purposes as it is a life record of the earth which is documented in the form of fossils which go on to tell that the life was not unicellular (as it was believed that time) but a document of larger life of multi-cellular life, Misra says.
 
"This site is also important because it provides a vital link to Darwin's theory of evolution," the septuagenarian says. He says that for ages the site would be of immense interest to biology students.
 
 
Misra now has a wish that an Indian's name be duly recognised at the Mistaken Point.

MORE International ARTICLES

Pakistani Arrested At Sicily Migrant Camp

Pakistani Arrested At Sicily Migrant Camp
Police in Italy's Sicily on Friday arrested a Pakistani national at the sprawling Cara di Mineo holding camp for asylum-seekers, reports said.

Pakistani Arrested At Sicily Migrant Camp

SUV Drives Into Granville Island Building, One Dead, Two Injured

Vancouver police say one person was killed after being run over and pinned under a vehicle while walking on Granville Island, one of the city's busiest tourist destinations.

SUV Drives Into Granville Island Building, One Dead, Two Injured

Democratic Convention In Philadelphia Turns Spotlight On Indian Americans

Democratic Convention In Philadelphia Turns Spotlight On Indian Americans
Three leaders from the Indian American community took the stage before the 4,765 national delegates and the national media as the Democratic Party Convention turned the spotlight on the community, recognising its rising role.

Democratic Convention In Philadelphia Turns Spotlight On Indian Americans

Hafiz Saeed also in charge of ISIS attacks in Afghanistan: Voice of America

Head of the Lashkar-e-Taiba Hafiz Saeed is wanted in India for plotting terrorist attacks on its soil, including the heinous 2008 Mumbai attack that killed 166 people.

Hafiz Saeed also in charge of ISIS attacks in Afghanistan: Voice of America

Using 'Crazies' Like Hafiz Saeed Will Harm Pakistan: Former Diplomat Husain Haqqani

Using 'Crazies' Like Hafiz Saeed Will Harm Pakistan: Former Diplomat Husain Haqqani
Pakistan's "obsession" to match India in military strength and efforts to equalise the field with "crazies" like Hafiz Saeed, would only create hatred which will bite it back, former Pakistan Ambassador to US Husain Haqqani has said.

Using 'Crazies' Like Hafiz Saeed Will Harm Pakistan: Former Diplomat Husain Haqqani

Indian Embassy To Appeal To Qatar SC For Two On Death Row

Indian Embassy To Appeal To Qatar SC For Two On Death Row
  While Subramanian Alagappa and Chilladurai Perumal have been sentenced to death, Sivakumar Archunan has been sentenced to life in prison on charges of murder of an elderly Qatari woman.

Indian Embassy To Appeal To Qatar SC For Two On Death Row