Posted on 04/27/2005 3:41:18 PM PDT by LibWhacker
A 15-year search for fossils in Africa has led to the discovery of eight fish specimens that are 450 million years old 50 million years older than any previous fish fossil on the continent and amongst the oldest in the world.
Professor Richard Aldridge, of the Department of Geology at the University of Leicester, who co-led the scientific expedition, says the fossil discovery is among the most remarkable and exciting ever to be found on the continent. He said:
These exciting fossils help to fill in a missing link in the evolutionary history of the very early fishes. They are new to science, and we have yet to describe them and to give them a scientific name. Scientists working on fossils in the Cedarberg Mountains around Clanwilliam, South Africa, unearthed the ancient remains of forms that represent the evolutionary stage before the fishes had any skeleton at all.
The scientific team, led by Professor Aldridge of the University of Leicester and Dr Hannes Theron of the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, has been working on these deposits for fifteen years and many remarkable fossils have been recovered.
Professor Aldridge said: These new fish finds are among the most exciting ever. People may wonder how we know that these fossils are fishes, when we have no bones with which to identify them. The answer is that the exceptional preservation displayed in these rocks enables us to recognise the eyes, scales and even the liver of the animals. The impressions in the shale are very faint, but they are also very clear and diagnostic. The first, incomplete, specimen was found in 1994, just as the first elections in the new South Africa were taking place, and we nicknamed the fossil Nelson in honour of the newly-elected President. In the eleven years since then no more specimens were found, until this year when the team, amazingly, recovered seven additional specimens.
Dr Theron provided further background: These fishes come from a time in the remote past when Africa was in an ice age, and before any animals had colonised the land. They are preserved where they lived in a shallow sea fed by melt waters from the receding ice sheets.
Source: University of Leicester
Evolution ping.
Hey, that is my fish, I caught it at a tribal meet. Leave it alone I left it there for "the children" 8-)
Nope! Every1 noze plan net Erth iz own lee 6 millyun year zold !!! ;-))
I have been wondering about this for years.....Imagine even Africa had an ice age, did any one notify Al Gore?
The problem with popular media articles is they (understandably) don't go through explaning the elaborate and rather technical processes by which fossils are dated, to avoid boring most of their audience.
ping
At the time Africa was near the South Pole, as part of Gondwanaland.
"...to avoid boring most of their audience."
So, they'd rather mislead them instead?
looks like my left nut after surfing
No, no, no, no!!! According to creationists, since we can pick up fossilized ferns(which blanketed the planet for hundreds of millions of years) werever we look, we have found all we are going to find. So there are no "Missing Links"
Bad logic, I agree. But it's what they push.
So, the world has been warming up for 450 million years. We must do something about this.
looks like my left nut after surfing
I think you've just won the "Best Description of Helen Thomas" Award... |
I've always had a problem believing that all the land masses were formed on one side of the globe and travelled to their existing sites. It boggles my mind that the planet could stay static enough to support the mass on one side.
"looks like my left nut after surfing"
Dang your Nu#$ are high! :-)
As far as I'm concerned, it would be a major evolutionary advance if I no longer had to pick out bones from my trout.
Wonder how they tasted? Maybe saute in garlic and butter?
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