Here is an article some people may, or may not, find interesting:
"Early whales gave birth, and probably rested and mated, on land, according to a study that examined 47.5 million-year-old fossils discovered in Pakistan.
The "stunning discovery" reinforces the belief that modern sea-dwelling mammals originated from terrestrial ancestors, said H. Richard Lane, director of the National Science Foundation's palaeontology program, which funded the research.
The team that discovered the Pakistan fossils in 2000 and 2004 were initially baffled when they found whale skeletons so close together, team leader Philip Gingerich of the University of Michigan said.
"When we first saw the small teeth, we thought we were dealing with a small adult whale, but then we continued to expose the specimen and found ribs that seemed too large to go with those teeth," he said.
"By the end of the day, we realised we had found a female whale with a foetus."
The foetus was positioned for head-first delivery, like land mammals but unlike modern whales, according to the study, published in the Public Library of Science's online journal.
The positioning indicated the whales still gave birth on land, Dr Gingerich said.
Other clues, such as the whales' big teeth that would have been well-suited to catch and eat fish, suggested to researchers that the mammals lived most of their time in the sea, but came on land to rest, mate and give birth.
The primitive whale couldn't travel far on land, although according to the study, "they could support their weight on their flipper-like limbs".
"They clearly were tied to the shore," Dr Gingerich said.
"They were living at the land-sea interface and going back and forth."
The discovery gives unparalleled insight into how the early whale gave birth and how it transitioned from land to sea, according to the researchers.
The fossils' species "occupies an intermediate position on the evolutionary path that whales traversed as they made the transition from full-time land dwellers to dedicated denizens of the deep," the authors said in a statement.
"Specimens this complete are virtual 'Rosetta stones,'" Dr Gingerich said.
They provide "insight into the life history of extinct animals that cannot be gained any other way.""
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Monday, February 2, 2009
A short update of my life
Hey everyone,
I haven't posted anything in a while so here are the basic updates of my quest to become a Palaeontologist (well really just updates in general)
I haven't posted anything in a while so here are the basic updates of my quest to become a Palaeontologist (well really just updates in general)
- I started my final year of high school last week
- I will be starting a university course in march (see http://dino-gal.blogspot.com/2008/12/going-university.html if you dont understand why I am doing university and high school at the same time - basically I am in an advanced program)
- I actaully managed to get the sequal to Jurassic Park from the library and am currently in the process of reading it
Well thats basically all, pretty boring I know. I might not be able to post often as the work load gets heavier with high school and uni so post will probably be really infreaquent. Anyway thats all for now.
Bye guys
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
