Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Pliocene Museum in Dorkovo is the only one on the Balkans

БНР Новини

Dorkovo is a small village huddled in the Rhodope Mountains. It is located in the Chepinska Valley, on the two banks of the Matnitsa River, about 15 km. from Tsigov Chark the resort complex and about 20 km. from the "St. Constantine and Helena" resort, situated on the banks of the Batak Dam. Clean streets and neat houses welcome tourists in the early hours of the morning. Surprisingly, the square is full of people waiting for the bus to the nearby Velingrad. The town called the spa-capital of Bulgaria is some 15 km away. Some are having quiet conversations, others are sitting on the benches, without hurrying or checking their watches. But the most impressive thing about the square is the "St. Prophet Elijah" church. The bell tower rises magnificently and the morning sun rays reflect from it, illuminating the courtyard of the nearby school. The church is not a national monument, but locals claim it resembles Sofia's St. Alexander Nevsky Cathedral.

Снимка

Records about Dorkovo date back to the Middle Ages. The earliest written document is from 1515. It shows that the name of the village was the same back then. The village is known to lovers of folklore with its desire to preserve and promote folk art. For nearly 20 years there has been an International Festival of Authentic Folklore under the auspices of the Ministry of Culture taking place here. In recent years, the village has evolved as a place for alternative tourism, especially after 2013, when the Diorama Pliocene Park opened here. It has become a reality, thanks to a rich paleontological deposit on a small area with over 600 bones of nearly 30 species of animals discovered there. They date back to the early Pliocene, a period from which no other such deposits have been discovered in Bulgaria. Although in the 1930s the locals tried to draw attention of experts towards bones of unknown origin that were found in the area, it was in the 1980s when geologists of the Sofia University unearthed the fossil deposit.

Снимка

At the initiative of Prof. Nikolay Spasov of the National Museum of Natural History at the Bulgarian Academy of Science, in cooperation with the National Natural History Museum in Paris, organized archaeological works in the area. After three years of work, the Bulgarian-French expedition concluded that this was the largest paleontological field on the Balkans and the second largest in Europe. In 1990 the deposit was declared a natural landmark. On the idea of expedition leader Prof. Erber Thomas of Collège de France, with the active participation of scientists from the Museum of Natural History at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and with funds from the "Regional Development" Operational Program, the existing museum was built.

Снимка

The cylindrical shape of the building attracts attention from afar. It is a metal structure lined with wood and having a glass dome. The idea of the creators is beehive resemblance. It was declared Building of 2013. In the center of the interior space, with an area of about 300 sq. m, a real-size mammut model rises, which is really impressive! The height is 3.90 m, its tusks are 3.50 m long. This is the most prominent representative of Pliocene – Anancus arvernensis. The animal was herbivore and weighed about 10 tons.Снимка The model is made of plastic, gypsum and Styrofoam. Horsehair was used to make the tail and eyelashes look more realistic. Nearby one can see a large tusk of a Mammut borson on display, as well as a model of Dolichopitecus ruscinensis. Various fossils – teeth and bones of various prehistoric species can be seen on display in the museum. A huge diorama, with sound and picture, presents the flora and fauna in the area of Dorkovo some 5 million years ago when the climate was warmer and wetter. Besides the typical vegetation of the period that included magnolia, rhododendron and others, one can mammuts and various representatives of the era, including Hipparions, Tapirus arvernensis, primitive bears, deer and other ancestors of today's species. Attention is also paid to Tetrao rhodopensis, which is considered to be the most ancient representative of the species and a Balkan Pliocene duck. The bones of both species, considered new to science, were found in the Dorkovo deposit. The rich collection of photos and exhibits in the museum, accompanied by detailed explanations, would surely expand visitors’ knowledge of evolution.

English: Alexander Markov

Photos: Svetlana Dimitrova and bg.wikipedia.org


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

Gallery

More from category

From left to right - Hristo Botev, Ivan Drasov and Nikola Slavkov.

Bulgaria lost one of the greatest heroic figures of our times in the fire of the fight for national independence

The testimonies of those who took part in the fateful events of 1876 are numerous and often contradictory. But the letters and documents about the April Uprising, which led to the liberation of Bulgaria , paint a fuller picture of the events that goes..

published on 6/2/24 6:35 AM

Tsar Ferdinand’s last will to be buried in Bulgaria is now fulfilled

76 years after his death, the remains of the first Bulgarian Tsar of the Third Bulgarian Tsardom, Ferdinand I, were returned to the "Vrana" Palace and his last will has finally been fulfilled. The Tsar wrote that he wished to be..

published on 5/30/24 5:01 PM
Sliven's new Metropolitan Arseniy

The Diocese of Sliven has a new Metropolitan, in front of the Synod he was greeted with exclamations "Unworthy"

In the centuries-old tradition of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, the laity have always greeted the new cleric or bishop with exclamations of "worthy". In this way they express their respect and hope that he will wisely lead the congregation to spiritual..

published on 5/27/24 4:23 PM