A blue hole in Abaco is gaining international attention, revealing tightly-held secrets preserved for up to 4,000 years, evidence of an era when The Bahamas was home to land-roaming crocodiles, giant tortoises, flightless birds, ancient bats and owls that roosted 85 feet belowground. Known as the Sawmill Sink, the sal****er-filled blue hole in the heart of the pinelands on the island of Great Abaco was the recipient of National Geographic's largest expedition grant for 2008 and is scheduled to be the subject of a major NG feature this year.
Fossils excavated from Bahamian blue hole may give clues of early life Long before tourists arrived in the Bahamas, ancient visitors took up residence in this archipelago off Floridas coast and left remains offering stark evidence that the arrival of humans can permanently change and eliminate life on what had been isolated islands, says a University of Florida researcher. The unusual discovery of well-preserved fossils in a water-filled sinkhole called a blue hole revealed the bones of landlubbing crocodiles and tortoises that did not survive human encroachment, said David Steadman, a UF ornithologist and the lead author of a paper published this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The climate and environmental conditions back then werent much different from those of today. The big difference is us. When people got to the island, there was probably nothing easier to hunt than tortoises so they cooked and ate them. And they got rid of the crocodiles because its tough to have kids playing at the edge of the village where there are terrestrial crocodiles running around - David Steadman, who works at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus.
The first entire fossilised skeletons of a tortoise and a crocodile found anywhere in the West Indies were uncovered from Sawmill Sink on Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas, along with bones of a lizard, snakes, bats and 25 species of birds, as well as abundant plant fossils.