Lilydale Regional Park is off-limits to young fossil hunters while St. Paul officials investigate the landslide that buried four children on a class field trip, killing two of them.
A portion of the park that annually hosts more than 400 groups eager to search the steep bluffs for fossils was closed indefinitely Thursday, just hours after rescue workers recovered the body of 10-year-old Mohamed Fofana from the avalanche of mud, sand and rocks that buried the four students from Peter Hobart Elementary School in St. Louis Park on Wednesday afternoon.
Frantic emergency workers had used shovels, heavy equipment and bare hands to dig 9-year-old Haysem Sani's body from the ground within hours of the slide.
Darkness and dangerous conditions, however, forced them to call off the search for Mohamed and return Thursday morning, when they found his body just 4 feet from where the other boy had died.
Two other fourth-grade students were rescued. One has been released from Regions Hospital; the other remains in serious condition.
Gov. Mark Dayton was scheduled to visit the school at 9:45 a.m. Friday and "address students, faculty, staff and community members about the tragedy," school district spokeswoman Sara Thompson said in a statement.
St. Paul Parks and Recreation director Mike Hahm called the deaths "unprecedented." City officials said they didn't know of any recent landslides in the park, although gradual erosion is common. No significant injuries have been reported in the past five years.
"I've gone in the rain, the sunshine and the snow," said Mayor Chris Coleman, who lives across from the park. "They are wonderful places for children to be able to explore. We had no reason to believe that anything of this nature would occur."