logo
Eggs en Provence: France's unique dinosaur egg trove

Eggs en Provence: France's unique dinosaur egg trove

Kuwait Times05-07-2025
At the foot of Sainte Victoire, the mountain in Provence immortalized by Impressionist painter Paul Cezanne, a palaeontologist brushes meticulously through a mound of red clay looking for fossils. These are not any old fossils, but 75-million-year-old dinosaur eggs.
Little luck or skill is needed to find them: scientists believe that there are more dinosaur eggs here than at any other place on Earth. The area, closed to the public, is nicknamed 'Eggs en Provence', due to its proximity to the southeastern city of Aix en Provence. 'There's no other place like it,' explained Thierry Tortosa, a palaeontologist and conservationist at the Sainte Victoire Nature Reserve.
'You only need to look down to find fragments. We're literally walking on eggshells here.' Around 1,000 eggs, some of them as big as 30 centimeters (12 inches) in diameter, have been found here in recent years in an area measuring less than a hectare - a mere dot on a reserve that will span 280 hectares once it is doubled in size by 2026 to prevent pillaging.
'We reckon we've got about one egg per square meter (11 square feet). So there are thousands, possibly millions, here,' Tortosa told AFP. 'Eggs' is not in the business of competing with other archaeological sites - even though Tortosa finds the 'world record' of 17,000 dinosaur eggs discovered in Heyuan, China, in 1996 vaguely amusing.
'We're not looking to dig them up because we're in a nature reserve and we can't just alter the landscape. We wait until they're uncovered by erosion,' he said. 'Besides, we don't have enough space to store them all. We just take those that are of interest from a palaeontology point of view.'
Thierry Tortosa shows dinosaur eggs found at the Mount Sainte-Victoire site.
Children search for dinosaur eggs at the Mount Sainte-Victoire site.
An adult and a child search for dinosaur eggs at the Mount Sainte-Victoire site.
A person searches for dinosaur eggs at the Mount Sainte-Victoire site.
Holy Grail
Despite the plethora of eggs on site, the scientists still have mysteries to solve. Those fossils found so far have all been empty, either because they were not fertilized or because the chick hatched and waddled off. 'Until we find embryos inside - that's the Holy Grail - we won't know what kind of dinosaur laid them. All we know is that they were herbivores because they're round,' said Tortosa. Fossilized dinosaur embryos are rarer than hen's teeth.
Palaeontologists discovered a tiny fossilized Oviraptorosaur that was at least 66 million years old in Ganzhou, China, around the year 2000. But Tortosa remains optimistic that 'Eggs' holds its own Baby Yingliang. 'Never say never. In the nine years that I've been here, we've discovered a load of stuff we never thought we'd find.'
Which is why experts come once a year to search a new part of the reserve. The location is always kept secret to deter pillagers. When AFP visited, six scientists were crouched under camouflage netting in a valley lost in the Provencal scrub, scraping over a few square meters of clay-limestone earth, first with chisels, then with pointy-tipped scribers. 'There's always something magical - like being a child again - when you find an egg or a fossilized bone,' specialist Severine Berton told AFP.
Unique
Their 'best' finds - among the thousands they have dug up - include a small femur and a 30-centimetre-long tibia-fibula. They are thought to come from a Rhabdodon or a Titanosaur - huge herbivores who roamed the region.
In the Cretaceous period (89-66 million years BCE), the Provencal countryside's then-flooded plains and silty-clayey soils offered ideal conditions for dinosaurs to graze and nest, and perfect conditions to conserve the eggs for millennia.
The region, which stretched from what is now Spain to the Massif Central mountains of central France formed an island that was home to several dinosaur species found nowhere else in the world. Alongside the endemic herbivores were carnivores such as the Arcovenator and the Variraptor, a relative of the Velociraptor of Jurassic Park fame.
In 1846, French palaeontologist Philippe Matheron found the world's first fossilized dinosaur egg in Rognac, around 30 kilometers from Eggs. Since then, museums from across the world have dispatched people to Provence on egg hunts. Everyone, it seems, wants a bit of the omelette.
Despite efforts to stop pillaging, problems persist, such as when a wildfire uncovered a lot of fossils in 1989 and 'everyone came egg collecting', Tortosa said. Five years later the site was designated a national geological nature reserve, closed to the public - the highest level of protection available. The regional authorities are now mulling over ways to develop 'palaeontology tourism', a move Tortosa applauds. 'France is the only country in the world that doesn't know how to promote its dinosaurs,' Tortosa said. 'Any other place would set up an entire museum just to show off a single tooth.' — AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bull sharks linger in warming Sydney waters
Bull sharks linger in warming Sydney waters

Kuwait Times

time5 days ago

  • Kuwait Times

Bull sharks linger in warming Sydney waters

Bull sharks are lingering off Sydney's beaches for longer periods each year as oceans warm, researchers said Friday, predicting they may one day stay all year. The predators are migratory, swimming north in winter when Sydney's long-term ocean temperatures dip below 19 degrees Celsius (66 degrees Fahrenheit) to bask in the balmier waters off Queensland. A team of scientists looked at 15 years of acoustic tracking of 92 tagged migratory sharks in an area including Bondi Beach and Sydney Harbor. Records show the sharks now spend an average of 15 days longer off Sydney's coast in summer than they did in 2009, said James Cook University researcher Nicolas Lubitz. 'If they're staying longer, it means that people and prey animals have a longer window of overlap with them.' Bull sharks gather to inspect a group of divers and a bait box that has caught their attending off the coast of Jupiter, Florida. Shark attacks are rare in ocean-loving Australia, and most serious bites are from three species: bull sharks, great whites, and tiger sharks, according to a national database. There have been more than 1,200 shark incidents around Australia since 1791, of which over 250 resulted in death. Researchers found an average warming of 0.57C in Bondi for the October-May period between 2006 and 2024, said the study published in the peer-reviewed journal Science of The Total Environment. Over a longer period, remotely sensed summer sea-surface temperatures in the area rose an average 0.67C between 1982 and 2024, they said. Bull sharks 'year-round' 'If this trend persists, which it likely will, it just means that these animals are going to spend more and more time towards their seasonal distributional limit, which currently is southern and central New South Wales,' Lubitz said. 'So it could be that a few decades from now, maybe bull sharks are present year-round in waters off Sydney,' he added. 'While the chances of a shark bite, and shark bites in Australia in general, remain low, it just means that people have to be more aware of an increased window of bull shark presence in coastal waters off Sydney.' Climate change could also change breeding patterns, Lubitz said, with early evidence indicating juvenile sharks were appearing in rivers further south. There was some evidence as well that summer habitats for great whites, which prefer colder waters, were decreasing in northern New South Wales and Queensland, he said. Tagged sharks trigger an alarm when they swim within range of a network of receivers dotted around parts of the Australian coast, giving people real-time warnings on a mobile app of their presence at key locations.—AFP This handout image released by Simon Fraser University/James Cook University shows bull sharks in the waters off Fiji. --AFP photos

I Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields
I Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields

Kuwait Times

time6 days ago

  • Kuwait Times

I Coast farmers hope tech tempts jaded youth back to fields

ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast: Stopwatch in hand, dozens of Ivory Coast students raced against the clock to design robots for the farms of the future in the world's top cocoa-producing nation. With each team facing off to draw up the best bot blueprint, the competition is part of a broader push to tempt the west African nation's large population of young people, disillusioned with farming life, back to the plough. Though farming has long been the pillar of Ivory Coast's economy, many young Ivorians have turned their backs on fruit-picking and tree-felling, discouraged by the hard labour and the slow pace of progress. 'I come from a family of farmers,' 20-year-old student Pele Ouattara told AFP at the event in Abidjan, Ivory Coast's largest city. 'My passion for robotics grew out of my desire to improve the conditions in which my parents used to farm,' he added. On a rival team several meters away, fellow student Urielle Diaidh, 24, feared that Ivorian farming 'risks dying out with time if modern technologies aren't adopted'. Dominated by the cultivation of cocoa, rubber and cashew nuts, nearly half of Ivorians with jobs work in agriculture in one way or another. Yet the country's farms have been slow to modernize. Less than 30 percent of farms are mechanized, according to the National Centre for Agronomic Research. And although three-quarters of Ivorians are under the age of 35, the sector is struggling to refresh an ageing workforce. Surrounded by a flurry of tiny white robots on their circuit rounds, digital transformation engineer Paul-Marie Ouattara said he has seen 'a real enthusiasm from young people' for bringing agriculture into the 21st century. This 'agriculture 4.0' that the competition wishes to promote is 'improved, enhanced through new technologies, whether they be robots, drones, artificial intelligence, or data processing', the 27-year-old said. All these 'will help the farmer', insisted Ouattara, who works for a private business which sponsored the contest. Young people have not wholly given up on farming, however — just on the old way of tilling the land. At the Ivorian digital transition ministry, Stephane Kounandi Coulibaly, director of innovation and private sector partnerships, said he had seen a boom in agricultural start-ups. Most of them were founded by young people, he added. The 'agritech' trend mirrors that already in motion across the continent, including in Benin, Nigeria and Kenya, with Abidjan hosting a forum for African start-ups at the beginning of July. Ivory Coast's world-leading cocoa growers, who produce 40 percent of the global supply, are also climbing aboard. 'We have noticed the appearance of new technologies since four or five years ago,' said Thibeaut Yoro, secretary-general of the national union of cocoa producers. Yoro hailed how those shiny new gadgets helped lighten a 'strenuous' job still riddled with 'archaic practices'. 'We dig, we hack through the bush, we harvest with machetes,' he said, with planters suffering from 'back aches and fatigue' as a result. 'These are things which could be changed with new technology,' the trade union leader argued. Who can afford those mod cons is another question altogether. A pesticide-spraying drone with a capacity of 20 liters (five US gallons) can cost nine million CFA francs, or around $16,000. That is nine times what the average farmer, owning one hectare (two-and-a-half acres) of cocoa trees, would make in six months. To reduce those costs, out of the reach of most farmers, a number of Ivorian enterprises offering equipment and technology for hire have sprung up. In the verdant countryside outside of Tiassale, around 125 kilometers (78 miles) outside of Abidjan, Faustin Zongo has called in a contractor to spray his field of passion fruit plants with pesticides. Thanks to the drone, the job took 10 minutes per hectare to complete, for the cost of around $27. Using traditional methods, 'it would take two days for each hectare', the farmer said. By his side, Nozene Ble Binate, project manager for Investiv — the company Zongo hired — said that using up-to-date technology made farming 'more attractive'. 'More and more young people are returning to the land and reaching out to us,' the 42-year-old said. Back in Abidjan, Jool has made a business of offering ranchers software-powered analysis of their crops, with prices starting under $100. The start-up's 32-year-old founder, Joseph-Olivier Biley — the son of farmers himself — boasted of his tool's ability to 'know what to plant, where and how' and to 'detect diseases before they strike'. With it, farmers could expect yields 'optimized by more than 40 percent', Biley told AFP at Jool's offices, on the outskirts of the Ivorian economic capital. At the digital transformation ministry, Coulibaly, the innovation chief, said the west African country plans to build a centre for manufacturing state-of-the-art inventions and training farmers in their use. That would mean Ivorian businesses would no longer have to import their technology from abroad, often from China, he added. — AFP

Dogs on the trail of South Africa's endangered tortoises
Dogs on the trail of South Africa's endangered tortoises

Kuwait Times

time6 days ago

  • Kuwait Times

Dogs on the trail of South Africa's endangered tortoises

Dogs on the trail of South Africa's endangered tortoises Snout pressed to the ground, a border collie named Delta zigzagged through the shrubs on a private nature reserve near Cape Town, frantically sniffing for critically endangered tortoises. The dog stopped abruptly in front of a small bush and lay down, signaling a find as Delta's handler moved in to search the surrounding area. Hidden in the tall grass was a tiny reptile, its shell marked with yellow star-like patterns -- a clear sign it was a geometric tortoise, a species found only at the southern tip of Africa. 'It's an adult female, you can tell by its flat belly,' said Esther Matthew, the dog's handler and a conservation officer for South Africa's Endangered Wildlife Trust. She explained that the organization uses canines to sniff out the endangered species by 'building positive association with the tortoises' odor', throwing Delta a foam frisbee as a reward. Dogs are five times more effective than humans at this type of search and 'also help us find the smaller tortoises which are often overlooked, the hatchlings and the juveniles', Matthew said. 'We've seen a dramatic increase in the number of finds with the dogs.' A critically endangered Geometric tortoise walks through the bush on a private reserve. A conservation official talks about a critically endangered female Geometric tortoise, that they found with specially trained dogs on a private reserve in the Boland district of the Western Cape. A general view of flowers in the genus, Oxalis, growing on a private reserve. A conservation official, working as part of the Endangered Wildlife Trust's Dryland Conservation Project, talks about a critically endangered female Geometric tortoise. Collie dog, Delta, working as part of the Endangered Wildlife Trust's Dryland Conservation Project, works to sniff out critically endangered Geometric tortoises. Dog-handler Esther Matthew, and Collie dog, Delta, working as part of the Endangered Wildlife Trust's Dryland Conservation Project, play a short game of frisbee as a reward for locating a critically endangered Geometric tortoise on a private reserve. Shrinking numbers The help has become crucial in studying and protecting the geometric tortoise, found only in South Africa's Western Cape province and on the verge of extinction. The species' population was already as low as 1,500 individuals in the wild in the early 1990s, according to biologist Andrew Turner, who works for the conservation authority Cape Nature. It is now estimated at only several hundred animals with 'declines pretty much across the entire remaining range of this species', he told AFP. On the nature reserve, Delta and Matthew -- helped by colleagues searching the bushes with sticks -- found a dozen of the hardy reptiles. 'We record all the tortoises we can find, all the data, measurements and weight,' Delta's handler explained. 'Creating corridors' With the species' natural habitat shrinking due to agriculture and urban expansion, these surveys have become all the more critical, Turner said. 'There are very few places left in the Western Cape that still support these tortoises. It's really just a couple of nature reserves and pieces of good habitat left on people's private property,' he added. 'The remaining patches of vegetation are not really connected to each other anymore. There are farmlands in between, roads, towns and industries so there is limited ability for the tortoises to disperse and rescue other populations.' This fragmentation makes them all the more vulnerable to droughts, predation and fires, which scientists argue have become more frequent and intense thanks to climate change. Poaching -- of the tortoises and the plants they feed on -- is also a threat, Turner said. 'They are down to such small levels that they actually need as much assistance as they can get,' he said. To save the species, the Endangered Wildlife Trust has looked at building 'partnerships' with landowners and communities living in the animals' habitat. 'The biggest thing is... creating corridors where species can work through,' explained Zanne Brink, who leads the organization's dry lands conservation program. 'Our biggest challenge is to get enough information to prevent critical biodiversity areas from being lost to unsustainable land use.'—AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store