Hong Kong’s leader has pledged to develop more special tourist routes on Port Island, where the first dinosaur bone fossils discovered in the city were recently excavated.
Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said on Tuesday that the new tourist routes would combine the island’s existing attractions, such as the hexagonal volcanic rock columns, with exhibitions of dinosaur fossils.
The city leader’s remarks came a week after Hong Kong discovered for the first time dinosaur bone fossils on Port Island, a remote island off the northeastern coast of the city. Experts estimated that the fossils dated back to the Cretaceous period, about 145 million to 66 million years ago.
“The dinosaur fossil is the first discovery in Hong Kong. We are…















