Science Daily - Paleontology

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Paleontology News and Research. Read about the latest discoveries in the fossil record including theories on why the dinosaurs went extinct and more.
Updated: 14 hours 24 min ago

Revised dating of the Liujiang skeleton renews understanding of human occupation of China

Wed, 05/01/2024 - 08:16
Researchers have provided new age estimates and revised provenance information for the Liujiang human fossils, shedding light on the presence of Homo sapiens in the region. Using advanced dating techniques including U-series dating on human fossils, and radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating on fossil-bearing sediments, the study revealed new ages ranging from approximately 33,000 to 23,000 years ago. Previously, studies had reported ages of up to 227,000 years of age for the skeleton.
Categories: Fossils

The double-fanged adolescence of saber-toothed cats

Mon, 04/29/2024 - 21:34
How did North America's saber-toothed cats hunt without breaking their unwieldy saber-like canines, which are vulnerable to sideways bending stresses? A paleontologist provides mechanical evidence that during adolescence, when young cats were learning to hunt, their baby teeth remained in place for up to 30 months to laterally buttress the emerging permanent sabers. By the time the baby teeth fell out, presumably the adult cat knew how to protect its sabers during attacks.
Categories: Fossils

T. Rex not as smart as previously claimed

Mon, 04/29/2024 - 09:30
Dinosaurs were likely as smart as reptiles but not as intelligent as monkeys.
Categories: Fossils

Researchers find oldest undisputed evidence of Earth's magnetic field

Wed, 04/24/2024 - 10:15
A new study has recovered a 3.7-billion-year-old record of Earth's magnetic field, and found that it appears remarkably similar to the field surrounding Earth today.
Categories: Fossils

Fossil frogs share their skincare secrets

Tue, 04/23/2024 - 10:30
Palaeontologists have solved a hundred-year-old mystery of how some fossil frogs preserve their fleshy parts -- it's all down to their skin. Palaeontologists studied 45-million-year-old fossil frogs from the Geiseltal site in central Germany. Remarkably, the fossils show full body outlines of the soft tissues. The team discovered that the excellent condition of the fossil frogs is due to preservation of ancient skin remnants.
Categories: Fossils

Ice age climate analysis reduces worst-case warming expected from rising CO2

Wed, 04/17/2024 - 17:27
A detailed reconstruction of climate during the most recent ice age, when a large swath of North America was covered in ice, provides information on the relationship between CO2 and global temperature. Results show that while most future warming estimates remain unchanged, the absolute worst-case scenario is unlikely.
Categories: Fossils

Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile

Wed, 04/17/2024 - 17:26
The fossilized remains of a second gigantic jawbone measuring more than two meters long has been found on a beach in Somerset, UK.
Categories: Fossils

Marine plankton behavior could predict future marine extinctions

Wed, 04/17/2024 - 12:11
Marine communities migrated to Antarctica during the Earth's warmest period in 66 million years long before a mass-extinction event.
Categories: Fossils

Genetic variant identified that shaped the human skull base

Wed, 04/17/2024 - 12:10
Researchers have identified a variant in the gene TBX1 as key in the development of the unique morphology at the base of the skull. TBX1 is present at higher levels in humans than in closely related hominins. Low TBX1 also occurs in certain genetic conditions causing altered skull base morphology. This study provides a greater understanding of human disease and evolution.
Categories: Fossils

Interspecies competition led to even more forms of ancient human -- defying evolutionary trends in vertebrates

Wed, 04/17/2024 - 12:10
Competition between species played a major role in the rise and fall of hominins -- and produced a 'bizarre' evolutionary pattern for the Homo lineage -- according to a new study that revises the start and end dates for many of our early ancestors.
Categories: Fossils

Seed ferns: Plants experimented with complex leaf vein networks 201 million years ago

Tue, 04/16/2024 - 10:59
According to a research team led by palaeontologists, the net-like leaf veining typical for today's flowering plants developed much earlier than previously thought, but died out again several times. Using new methods, the fossilized plant Furcula granulifer was identified as such an early forerunner. The leaves of this seed fern species already exhibited the net-like veining in the late Triassic (around 201 million years ago).
Categories: Fossils

Digging up new species of Australia and New Guinea's giant fossil kangaroos

Mon, 04/15/2024 - 10:06
Palaeontologists have described three unusual new species of giant fossil kangaroo from Australia and New Guinea, finding them more diverse in shape, range and hopping method than previously thought. The three new species are of the extinct genus Protemnodon, which lived from around 5 million to 40,000 years ago -- with one about double the size of the largest red kangaroo living today.
Categories: Fossils

3D mouth of an ancient jawless fish suggests they were filter-feeders, not scavengers or hunters

Wed, 04/10/2024 - 10:27
Early jawless fish were likely to have used bony projections surrounding their mouths to modify the mouth's shape while they collected food. Experts have used CT scanning techniques to build up the first 3D pictures of these creatures, which are some of the earliest vertebrates (animals with backbones) in which the mouth is fossilized. Their aim was to answer questions about feeding in early vertebrates without jaws in the early Devonian epoch -- sometimes called the Age of Fishes -- around 400 million years ago.
Categories: Fossils

Do some mysterious bones belong to gigantic ichthyosaurs?

Tue, 04/09/2024 - 11:39
Several similar large, fossilized bone fragments have been discovered in various regions across Western and Central Europe since the 19th century. The animal group to which they belonged is still the subject of much debate to this day. A study could now settle this dispute once and for all: The microstructure of the fossils indicates that they come from the lower jaw of a gigantic ichthyosaur. These animals could reach 25 to 30 meters in length, a similar size to the modern blue whale.
Categories: Fossils

In the evolution of walking, the hip bone connected to the rib bones

Fri, 04/05/2024 - 22:18
A new reconstruction of the 375-million-year-old fossil fish Tiktaalik -- a close relative of limbed vertebrates -- used micro-CT to reveal bones still embedded in matrix. The reconstruction shows that the fish's ribs likely attached to its pelvis, an innovation thought to be crucial to supporting the body and for the eventual evolution of walking.
Categories: Fossils

Dinosaur study challenges Bergmann's rule

Fri, 04/05/2024 - 22:18
A new study calls into question Bergmann's rule, an 1800s-era scientific principle stating that animals in high-latitude, cooler climates tend to be larger than close relatives living in warmer climates.
Categories: Fossils

Early dinosaurs grew up fast, but they weren't the only ones

Wed, 04/03/2024 - 16:09
The earliest dinosaurs had rapid growth rates, but so did many of the other animals living alongside them, according to a new study.
Categories: Fossils

New step in tectonic squeeze that turns seafloor into mountains

Tue, 04/02/2024 - 18:26
Researchers describe zircons from the Andes mountains of Patagonia. Although the zircons formed when tectonic plates were colliding, they have a chemical signature associated with when the plates were moving apart. The researchers think that the unexpected signature could be explained by the mechanics of underlying tectonic plates that hasn't yet been described in other models.
Categories: Fossils

We've had bird evolution all wrong

Mon, 04/01/2024 - 18:04
Genomic anamolies dating back to the time of the dinosaurs misled scientists about the evolutionary history of birds.
Categories: Fossils

In paleontology, correct names are keys to accurate study

Tue, 03/26/2024 - 12:47
When the skeletal remains of a giant ground sloth were first unearthed in 1796, the discovery marked one of the earliest paleontological finds in American history.
Categories: Fossils

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