Sea Cliffs and Fossils Ecozone
Spectacular coastal landforms and geology are showcased in the Sea Cliffs and Fossils Ecozone. Over thousands of years, the tides have sculpted Fundy’s ancient coast into sea cliffs and rock formations, enabling exciting internationally renowned fossil discoveries to be made.
Years of tidal activity in the Bay of Fundy have created some of the world’s most captivating and unusual landscape formations. The tidal action has carved dramatic cliffs, sea stacks, and caves in the sandstone in many parts of the Fundy coast. Elsewhere around the Bay, spectacular headlands of volcanic rock rise up hundreds of feet from sea level, boldly resisting Fundy’s relentless tides.
The following areas around the Bay of Fundy each represent an important chapter in the earth’s 500-million-year geological and fossil history.

Basalt cliffs at Hopewell Cape, NB.

Fundy
National Park of Canada, Alma, NB
Where to discover Fundy Sea Cliffs and Fossils |
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Location |
Landscape |
Activities |
| Grand Manan Island, NB | Sea cliffs, volcanic | Hiking trails headlands |
| St. Martins, NB | Sea caves | Beach access |
| Fundy Trail, St. Martins, NB | Coastal cliffs, rock escarpments | Hiking and biking trails, coastal auto-route, beach access |
| Fundy National Park of Canada, Alma, NB | Coastal cliffs, headlands | Hiking trails, auto-route sections, beach access, kayaking |
| Hopewell Rocks, Hopewell Cape, NB | Sandstone cliffs, carved formations | Walking trails, beach access, kayaking |
| Cape Chignecto Provincial Park, NS | Volcanic rock headlands, rock formations | Hiking trails, beach access |
| Cape d’Or, NS | Volcanic cliffs | Hiking trails, beach access |
| Five Islands Provincial Park, NS | Sculpted sandstone & sea cliffs, volcanic rock islands | Hiking trails, beach access |
| Cape Blomidon Provincial Park, NS | Volcanic rock headlands, sea cliffs | Hiking trails, beach access |
| Balancing Rock, Tiverton, Digby Neck, NS | Volcanic rock columns | Hiking trail |
Saint John, New Brunswick, The Fundy City
Early Marine Life – 450 to 600 million years ago
The
City of Saint John, NB, features 600- to 450-million-year-old
rocks from the Cambrian and Ordovician periods, which pre-date
the collision of the continents that led to the formation of
Pangea. Fossils of early marine creatures called trilobites,
which are distant relatives of crabs and other joint-legged
creatures that preceded the emergence of land animals, have
been found in Saint John. The New Brunswick Museum in Saint
John showcases fossils from this significant chapter in the
earth’s history and offers comprehensive interpretative
displays of the region ’s geology.

Trilobite fossil, New Brunswick Museum, Saint John, NB
Hopewell Cape, NB
Carboniferous Conglomerate – 350 million years ago
Uniquely shaped reddish cliffs of 350-million- year-old rock conglomerate and sandstone comprise the famous “flower pot” rock formations at the Hopewell Rocks. This conglomerate was formed as rocks and pebbles, washed down from a regional mountain range, were compressed and cemented together over millions of years. During a later period of tectonic activity, these layers of conglomerate, sandstone, and shale were lifted up and tilted to a 30-45º angle. Vertical cracks or fissures divided the rock into large blocks, which Fundy’s tides have since eroded into sea caves and huge carved-rock formations. Low tide visitors walking on the ocean floor at Hopewell Rocks can see the evidence of this tilting in the layers of rock in the rock face; the vertical cracks which are the genesis of new rock formations; and the telltale high-tide marks along the cliffs.

Hopewell
Rocks, Hopewell Cape, NB
Hillsborough, NB and Stewiacke, NS
Ancient Mammals – last two million years
The dinosaurs that had ruled the earth for over a hundred million years disappeared at the end of the Cretaceous period, 65 million years ago. Their decline created an opportunity for a new group of animals to become the dominant land-based creatures: mammals. Skeletons of extinct “Ice Age” mastodons have been discovered at Hillsborough, NB, and Stewiacke, NS. While mastodons and mammoths no longer exist, they are wooly cousins of present-day elephants. The fossilized bones of Hillsborough’s mastodon are on display at the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John. Mastodon Ridge, near Stewiacke, features a life-size reproduction of the mastodons from this region.

Hillsborough
Mastodon bones, New Brunswick Museum, Saint John, NB
Joggins, NS
Ancient Rainforests & The First Reptiles – 300 million years ago
In 1852, Sir Charles Lyell (one of the fathers of modern geology) and Sir William Dawson discovered fossils of the earliest known reptiles in Joggins, N.S. Unlike amphibians, reptiles lay hard-shelled eggs that can survive on land; reptiles had further adapted to the terrestrial environment’s unique conditions. Joggins’ fossil cliffs are the world’s most outstanding example of the late Carboniferous “Coal Age,” a period of ancient rainforests. Along with the oldest reptiles, extinct giant trees, ferns, massive crawling millipedes, insects, and amphibians are fossilized in these cliffs, which are accessible to the public, depending on the tide.

Fossilized
tree stump, Joggins, NS
Parrsboro, N.S.
Dawn of the Dinosaurs – 200 million years ago
The
Jurassic period heralded the beginning of the dinosaur age,
a period that would continue for 140 million years. Some of
the earliest dinosaur fossils ever found were discovered near
Parrsboro, N.S. These finds are internationally significant
because they contain fossils from both the end of the Triassic
period and the beginning of the Jurassic period (before and
after the extinctions). Fossils of amphibians and crocodile-like
reptiles from before the extinction and dinosaurs that emerged
after the extinction are both found in different layers of
rock in this region. The Fundy Geological Museum’s extensive
exhibits, working laboratory, and interpretive beach walks
offer several ways to explore this chapter of Fundy’s
natural history.

Dinosaur
skeleton, Fundy Geologcial Museum, Parrsboro, NS
