Posted on 02/24/2006 4:50:26 AM PST by S0122017
'Jurassic beaver' find stuns experts 19:00 23 February 2006 NewScientist.com news service Jeff Hecht
Enlarge image The discovery of a Jurassic beaver-like creature suggests early mammals were more diverse than thought (Image: Mark A. Klinger/CMNH)Related Articles
Nanjing University (in Chinese) Dinosaur special report, New Scientist Science
The discovery of a new, remarkably preserved fossil of a beaver-like mammal that lived 164 million years ago is shaking palaeontologists understanding of early mammals.
Looking as if it was put together from pieces of platypus, river otter, and beaver, the creature was nearly half a metre long and weighed about half a kilogram. This makes it the largest mammal ever found in the Jurassic Period, from 200 million to 145 million years ago.
The fossil of the semi-aquatic mammal Castorocauda lutrasimilis was discovered in the middle Jurassic Jiulongshan formation in Inner Mongolia, China, by Qiang Ji at Nanjing University, and colleagues. It boasts the oldest fossil fur ever found.
Palaeontologists had long thought the mammals living under the feet of the dinosaurs were tiny shrew-like animals. But recent discoveries have challenged this notion.
Full pelt In 2005, Repenomamus giganticus from China showed that land mammals had reached a metre in length about 130 million years ago, during the Cretaceous Period.
But the newly found fossil reveals that early mammals were also far more diverse than thought. The discoveries "are completely reconfiguring our understanding of Mesozoic mammals," says Hans-Dieter Sues of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History.
Castorocauda was preserved in exquisite detail, flattened in sediments at the bottom of an ancient lake. Hair impressions surround the body, which includes a 20-centimetre-long flat, beaver-like tail. Two slabs of sedimentary rock include most of the body and part of the skull.
The animal had "a full mammalian pelt, with guard hairs and under fur, and scales on the tail" like a modern beaver, says Zhe-Xi Luo of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, US, and one of the team.
Warm-blooded metabolism Castorocaudas webbed feet, limbs and broad flat tail are adapted for swimming, and its teeth specialised for catching fish, making it the earliest mammal known to live partly in the water. Another 100 million years would pass before ancestral whales and manatees turned to the water.
The creature probably lived like a modern platypus, says Luo, "digging a tunnel to nest and lay eggs, and going from the tunnel into the water to feed".
The discovery shows that fur and modern skin structures and warm-blooded metabolism originated very early in mammals. "Hair keeps us warm, and sweat glands help us to dissipate heat, so skin is part of the adaptation to constant body temperature," Luo told New Scientist.
"This is a pretty amazing find," Sues told New Scientist. What excites palaeontologists is the new-found diversity and complex evolutionary history of early mammals a group previously known mostly from scattered teeth. More complete fossils have been very rare.
"Traditionally, Mesozoic mammals were not the path to glory," says Sues.
Journal reference: Science (vol 311, p 1123)
Ping
Isnt this a cute addition to Jurassic park? Something for the childrens section :)
Must...not...make...Helen Thomas....reference!
Pardon the post, mistook this for a Hillary! thread.
Beat me
>>the creature was nearly half a metre long and weighed about half a kilogram.
That's one skinny beastie.
Methinks somebody missed something somewhere, on that.
In other words, the scientists didn't know what they were talking about, as usual. Reminds me of the famous dinosaur skeleton that spent about 100 years in a museum with the head bone attached to the tail bone.
a full mammalian pelt,
with guard hairs and under fur, and
scales on the tail like a modern beaver
Warm-blooded metabolism
webbed feet,
limbs and broad flat tail are adapted for swimming, and
teeth specialized for catching fish
pretty much popped out fully formed (punctuated equilibrium) and 164 million years of evolution has resulted in relatively minor changes since then?
This find is leaving paleontologists shaken but (of course) is causing no questions to be asked about the Theory of Evolution.
Nice beaver!
Not a paleontologist, but I've occasionally considered that the discovery of a giant beaver would be exciting. Certainly those fortunate individuals who are able to delve deeply into this matter may anticipate the discovery of much thrilling new knowledge as they peer into hitherto darkened corners of creation and open up to view greatly broadened avenues of exploration.
Yeah. I think that should read "kilowatt," not "kilogram."
That's one skinny beastie.
Hmm, thin enough for Callista Flockheart? But she's not old enough. Probl'y some relation, though.
BTW, on this Jurassic Beaver-Otter-thingie, could they confirm mammaries? Or is it something whose provenance will be somewhat uncertain for some time after discovery, like Archaeopteryx was?
Cheers!
Interesting.
Now, for laughs...................
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1492481/posts
jeez, they find beaver and this guy wants to see the boobs already. Be thankful for what you have!
Helen Thomas must be jealous of all this attention.
Thank goodness. Now even lefties can feel good about the Jurassic era.
I don't see why it should. The arrogance of some "science" is breathtaking.
Some "scientists" keep repeating the mistakes of previous generations: there is a natural "finality" that centers around their own short esistence and the issue is essentially closed.
Science is on the threshold of discovering the final extent and the secrets of the big bang; and the universe.
Right.
"Such large returns in conjecture, from such small investment in fact."
Doesn't fit your neat and clear framework, does it?
Get a bigger hammer!
Yes, Hobbs; it IS a Calvinosaurus!
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