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You are here: Home / National Park Service Spotlights / 2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources / Poster Session: 2016 Spotlight on National Parks / The First Volunteer Paleontological Monitoring Program in the National Park Service

The First Volunteer Paleontological Monitoring Program in the National Park Service

Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historical Park. In the summer of 2014, CHOH began a new volunteer monitoring program, the Paleo-Protectors. Recruited from a base of experienced and trusted park volunteers, the Paleo-Protectors monitor several of the many important paleontological localities with in the park. The program is similar to the Sites Stewards Program, which monitors sensitive archeological resources; however, this is the first program within NPS specifically for monitoring paleontological resources. Volunteers visit their sites at least once a year and monitor for erosion, fossil abundance, and possible fossil poaching, as well as other relevant data. Beginning in 2009, the National Capital Region partnered with the Geologic Resource Division to build paleontological resource inventories within the region. Since then four visiting paleontologists through GeoCorps America have helped in this effort which produced the Paleo- Protectors program: Erica Clites, Katie Loughney, Ivan Carabajal, and Liz Keily.
The First Volunteer Paleontological Monitoring Program in the National Park Service
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