Science Daily - Fossils

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Paleontology and fossil records. Read about fossil finds over the last 10 years starting with the most recent research. Full text, photos.
Updated: 6 hours 41 min ago

Surprisingly vibrant color of 12-million-year-old snail shells

Fri, 02/09/2024 - 15:34
Snail shells are often colorful and strikingly patterned. This is due to pigments that are produced in special cells of the snail and stored in the shell in varying concentrations. Fossil shells, on the other hand, are usually pale and inconspicuous because the pigments are very sensitive and have already decomposed. Residues of ancient color patterns are therefore very rare. This makes a new discovery all the more astonishing: researchers found pigments in twelve-million-year-old fossilized snail shells.
Categories: Fossils

New fossil site of worldwide importance uncovered in southern France

Fri, 02/09/2024 - 12:41
Nearly 400 exceptionally well-preserved fossils dating back 470 million years have been discovered in the south of France by two amateur paleontologists. The discovery provides unprecedented information on the polar ecosystems of the Ordovician period.
Categories: Fossils

Ancient Australian air-breathing fish from 380 million years ago

Tue, 02/06/2024 - 14:14
The rivers of Australia, which once flowed across its now dry interior, used to host a range of bizarre animals -- including a sleek predatory lobe-finned fish with large fangs and bony scales. The newly described fossil fish discovered in remote fossil fields west of Alice Springs has been named Harajicadectes zhumini by palaeontologists.
Categories: Fossils

Rare 3D fossils show that some early trees had forms unlike any you've ever seen

Fri, 02/02/2024 - 10:47
In the fossil record, trees typically are preserved with only their trunks. They don't usually include any leaves to show what their canopies and overall forms may have looked like. In a new study, researchers describe fossilized trees from New Brunswick, Canada with a surprising and unique three-dimensional crown shape.
Categories: Fossils

Did dementia exist in ancient Greek and Rome?

Wed, 01/31/2024 - 17:35
Did the ancient Greeks and Romans experience Alzheimer's? Medical texts from 2,500 years ago rarely mention severe memory loss, suggesting today's widespread dementia stems from modern environments and lifestyles, a new analysis shows.
Categories: Fossils

Scientists pinpoint growth of brain's cerebellum as key to evolution of bird flight

Tue, 01/30/2024 - 16:28
Evolutionary biologists report they have combined PET scans of modern pigeons along with studies of dinosaur fossils to help answer an enduring question in biology: How did the brains of birds evolve to enable them to fly?
Categories: Fossils

How did humans learn to walk? New evolutionary study offers an earful

Mon, 01/29/2024 - 11:25
A new study, which centers on evidence from skulls of a 6-million-year-old fossil ape, Lufengpithecus, offers important clues about the origins of bipedal locomotion courtesy of a novel method: analyzing its bony inner ear region using three-dimensional CT-scanning. The inner ear appears to provide a unique record of the evolutionary history of ape locomotion.
Categories: Fossils

DNA from preserved feces reveals ancient Japanese gut environment

Wed, 01/24/2024 - 15:45
DNA from ancient feces can offer archaeologists new clues about the life and health of Japanese people who lived thousands of years ago, according to a new study.
Categories: Fossils

Ancient brown bear genomes sheds light on Ice Age losses and survival

Wed, 01/24/2024 - 12:28
The brown bear is one of the largest living terrestrial carnivores, and is widely distributed across the Northern Hemisphere. Unlike many other large carnivores that went extinct at the end of the last Ice Age (cave bear, sabretoothed cats, cave hyena), the brown bear is one of the lucky survivors that made it through to the present. The question has puzzled biologists for close to a century -- how was this so?
Categories: Fossils

New pieces in the puzzle of first life on Earth

Wed, 01/24/2024 - 12:27
Microorganisms were the first forms of life on our planet. The clues are written in 3.5 billion-year-old rocks by geochemical and morphological traces, such as chemical compounds or structures that these organisms left behind. However, it is still not clear when and where life originated on Earth and when a diversity of species developed in these early microbial communities. Evidence is scarce and often disputed. Now, researchers have uncovered key findings about the earliest forms of life. In rock samples from South Africa, they found evidence dating to around 3.42 billion years ago of an unprecedentedly diverse carbon cycle involving various microorganisms. This research shows that complex microbial communities already existed in the ecosystems during the Palaeoarchaean period.
Categories: Fossils

Complex green organisms emerged a billion years ago

Tue, 01/23/2024 - 11:21
Of all the organisms that photosynthesize, land plants have the most complex form. How did this morphology emerge? A team of scientists has taken a deep dive into the evolutionary history of morphological complexity in streptophytes, which include land plants and many green algae. Their research allowed them to go back in time to investigate lineages that emerged long before land plants existed.
Categories: Fossils

Student discovers 200-million-year-old flying reptile

Mon, 01/22/2024 - 13:43
Gliding winged-reptiles were amongst the ancient crocodile residents of the Mendip Hills in Somerset, England, researchers at the have revealed.
Categories: Fossils

The megalodon was less mega than previously believed

Sun, 01/21/2024 - 18:21
A new study shows the Megalodon, a gigantic shark that went extinct 3.6 million years ago, was more slender than earlier studies suggested. This finding changes scientists' understanding of Megalodon behavior, ancient ocean life, and why the sharks went extinct.
Categories: Fossils

Why animals shrink over time explained with new evolution theory

Thu, 01/18/2024 - 11:22
The new theoretical research proposes that animal size over time depends on two key ecological factors.
Categories: Fossils

Woolly mammoth movements tied to earliest Alaska hunting camps

Wed, 01/17/2024 - 13:10
Researchers have linked the travels of a 14,000-year-old woolly mammoth with the oldest known human settlements in Alaska, providing clues about the relationship between the iconic species and some of the earliest people to travel across the Bering Land Bridge. Isotopic data, along with DNA from other mammoths at the site and archaeological evidence, indicates that early Alaskans likely structured their settlements to overlap with areas where mammoths congregated. Those findings, highlighted in the new issue of the journal Science Advances, provide evidence that mammoths and early hunter-gatherers shared habitat in the region. The long-term predictable presence of woolly mammoths would have attracted humans to the area.
Categories: Fossils

Pacific kelp forests are far older that we thought

Tue, 01/16/2024 - 12:18
Fossils of kelp along the Pacific Coast are rare. Until now, the oldest fossil dated from 14 million years ago, leading to the view that today's denizens of the kelp forest -- marine mammals, urchins, sea birds -- coevolved with kelp. A recent amateur discovery pushes back the origin of kelp to 32 million years ago, long before these creatures appeared. A new analysis suggests the first kelp grazers were extinct, hippo-like animals called desmostylians.
Categories: Fossils

Key moment in the evolution of life on Earth captured in fossils

Mon, 01/15/2024 - 11:12
New research has precisely dated some of the oldest fossils of complex multicellular life in the world, helping to track a pivotal moment in the history of Earth when the seas began teeming with new lifeforms -- after four billion years of containing only single-celled microbes.
Categories: Fossils

Even the oldest eukaryote fossils show dazzling diversity and complexity

Thu, 01/11/2024 - 15:27
The sun has just set on a quiet mudflat in Australia's Northern Territory; it'll set again in another 19 hours. A young moon looms large over the desolate landscape. No animals scurry in the waning light. No leaves rustle in the breeze. No lichens encrust the exposed rock. The only hint of life is some scum in a few puddles and ponds. And among it lives a diverse microbial community of our ancient ancestors.
Categories: Fossils

Oldest known fossilized skin is 21 million years older than previous examples

Thu, 01/11/2024 - 10:32
Researchers have identified a 3D fragment of fossilized skin that is at least 21 million years than previously described skin fossils. The skin, which belonged to an early species of Paleozoic reptile, has a pebbled surface and most closely resembles crocodile skin. It's the oldest example of preserved epidermis, the outermost layer of skin in terrestrial reptiles, birds, and mammals, which was an important evolutionary adaptation in the transition to life on land.
Categories: Fossils

Prehistoric person with Turner syndrome identified from ancient DNA

Thu, 01/11/2024 - 10:31
Researchers have developed a new technique to measure the number of chromosomes in ancient genomes more precisely, using it to identify the first prehistoric person with mosaic Turner syndrome (characterized by one X chromosome instead of two [XX]), who lived about 2500 years ago.
Categories: Fossils

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