Geology of Vancouver Island
Paleontology is big on Vancouver
Island. We had just moved here when Courtenay, the town nearest to us,
came out in style to welcome home its elasmosaur. The fossilized remains
of this great "swan lizard" had been found on the Puntledge River. They
had been shipped to Alberta to be classified and assembled and were coming
home to take a their position as the most exciting exhibit in our local
Paleontology Museum. In that same year, the Provincial Government set aside
the Artlish Cave Park on Northern Vancouver Island. I was curious. We had
come here from the greater Vancouver area and we did not have anything
comparable to this on that side of the Georgia Strait. I decided to look
into the geological history of the island. I read a book or two.

About the Dog
When I originally wrote these
pages, I thought that they might be of interest to home schoolers so I
got some help from my favourite dog. She has a way of expressing
herself in a very direct and forceful manner. It also seemed appropriate
and necessary to involve her because these pages started out on her home
page. She has dictated the page about the elasmosaur since she found the
idea of dinosaur size bones exciting. She also did a simplified version
of the page on plate tectonics. Now this section is no longer part of a
dog page but it is part of our home page and you can never sneak into our
home without being greeted by an enthusiastic welcome from Kiwi
so
it seemed appropriate to leave her to do her thing on these geology pages.
-
It was the return of our elasmosaur
that got us curious about it all to begin with.
-
Check here
if you want Kiwi's simple story of how our island was formed. This page
is suitable for young readers.
-
The
land forms on the island have been created by volcanic action that
took place millions of years ago. Shifting oceanic plates have caused folding
of the rock and as this process continues the area is subject to a significant
level of earthquake activity.
-
Vancouver Island is part of the
Wrangellia
Terrane. It was formed somewhere south of the equator and pushed up
here by the forces of plate tectonics.
-
Because it originated in another
hemisphere, the fossils
found
here are unlike those found elsewhere in Canada.
-
Vancouver Island has a whole underground
world arising from its geological past. Visit our caves
© 1997 vanisle.geo@oocities.com