Posted on 06/15/2018 10:22:59 PM PDT by Simon Green
At first glance, the oddly shaped splotches darkening a vibrant yellow piece of amber appear to be amorphous blobs. But upon closer examination, a shape emerges.
There are two forelimbs. At the end of each limb are four smaller bones, forming a distinctly handlike shape. Within the largest dark spot, which has a rounded top, eye sockets become distinguishable. Its a skull.
Encased within the smooth chunk of amber is the body of a tiny young tropical frog. Scientists say the diminutive critter, measuring less than an inch long, lived about 99 million years ago before it became entombed in sticky tree sap. At the time, dinosaurs still roamed Earth.
The fossil is one of four that date to the Cretaceous period, providing scientists with the earliest direct evidence that frogs inhabited wet, tropical forests, according to a statement from the Florida Museum of Natural History. The findings were published Thursday in Natures Scientific Reports.
Its almost unheard of to get a fossil frog from this time period that is small, has preservation of small bones and is mostly three-dimensional, the studys co-author David Blackburn, the associate curator of herpetology at the Florida Museum of Natural History, said in a statement. This is pretty special.
The fossils included one skeleton of a frog that was complete enough for scientists to identify it as a new species, named Electrorana limoae, the study said. The other fossils contain two hands and an imprint of a frog that probably decayed inside the amber.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
My pleasure!
Did you come ‘ere for an argument?
Not necessarily. I may be arguing in my spare time.
Don’t give the Washington Post any traffic.
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