Meet FRED: The world's 1st-ever, nearly complete fossil database

The near-complete database reflects a spirit of trust and collaboration among the country’s scientific community — but will it last?

A collage of many different types of fossils
Fossils in the FRED database span species and time.
(Image credit: GNS Science)

New Zealand is the only country in the world that has an essentially complete, open-access database of its known fossil record.

It's existed for almost 80 years, beginning in 1946 as a filing cabinet stuffed with paper forms at the New Zealand Geological Survey. The project was the initiative of Harold Wellman — the pioneering geologist who famously discovered New Zealand's 370-mile-long Alpine Fault — and a few others working on the first geological mapping of the country.

Kate Evans
Journalist and nature writer

Kate Evans is a writer and storyteller. She love sscience, nature, culture, food, and weird animal facts. She's a regular contributor to New Zealand Geographic Magazine and has written and reported for international media, including the New York Times, Washington Post, Scientific American, National Geographic News, the Guardian, BBC Future, Undark, and EOS.