Accueil > Explorer > Histoire > Sites du patrimoine mondial > Joggins Fossil Cliffs: UNESCO World Heritage Site

Joggins Fossil Cliffs: UNESCO World Heritage Site

The Joggins Fossil Cliffs offer visitors the unique opportunity to reach back in time and literally touch over 300 million years of history.

Coal Age Fossils in Nova Scotia, Canada

Located near the head of Nova Scotia’s Bay of Fundy, the cliffs have fascinated visitors for more than 150 years. Well before that, the Mi’kmaq called the place Chegoggin, “place of the fishing weirs” or Chegoggins, “the great encampment.” Eventually, the name was anglicized into became “Joggins” and it was its towering cliffs that geologists started exploring its towering cliffs in the mid-19th century.

Joggins’ wealth of Coal Age fossils was first recognized by Scottish geologist Sir Charles Lyell, who declared the site’s weathered cliffs “the finest exposure in the world”. That fossil exposure is the result of constant erosion by the Bay of Fundy’s record tides, slowly revealing a permanent record of the ancient plants and animals that lived in the area over 300 million years ago. Lyell and subsequent generations of scientists were able to identify species never before seen – and never seen since anywhere else on Earth. 

UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site Designation

It is this concentrated abundance of fossils and the clear window they give to the planet’s history that led to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) naming the Joggins Fossil Cliffs a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site. Along with the historic shipbuilding town of Lunenburg, Joggins joins the ranks of such well-known natural landmarks as the Grand Canyon, the Great Barrier Reef and the Galapagos Islands. 

Guides regularly take visitors down to the cliffs to examine incredibly well-preserved images of life well before humans walked the Earth. An entire ecosystem – plants and trees, insects and invertebrates, and amphibians and reptiles – can be spotted throughout the grey and reddish-brown rock and along the shore, including:

  • Plants and trees
  • Insects and invertebrates
  • Amphibians and reptiles

With the Bay of Fundy’s tides constantly eroding the cliffs and exposing more fossils, new discoveries lie just beneath the surface, just waiting to be found.

Joggins Fossil Centre

The centerpiece of the site is the Joggins Fossil Centre, an interpretive centre and the launch point to for guided tours of the cliffs. The centre also was built to minimize its impact on the natural wonders around it, supplementing its power from a wind turbine and built with showcasing a living green roof.  Here, visitors can learn more about the history of the cliffs and the fossils through interactive exhibits, enjoy lunch at the café, and find a local memento at the gift shop to take home. 

Joggins Fossil Centre Hours of Operation

The centre is open April 22nd to October 31st in 2012. with gGuided tours running throughout the day based on the tides. More information on the cliffs and the centre can be found on the Joggins Fossil Cliff's website.


À Faire et à Voir

cruise ship in pictou_sm_12_18631

À Faire et à Voir

010-3-3577_jpeg

Hébergement

Camping

Planifier

010-3-0149_jpeg

Régions

Regions
Discover Nova Scotia Getting Here and Around Plan Your Trip Accommodations Things to See and Do Blogs, Forums and Contests