Posted on 11/08/2004 4:02:03 PM PST by ckilmer
Fish fossil confirms origin of nostrils
18:00 03 November 04
Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition. Subscribe and get 4 free issues.
Land vertebrates can breathe through their noses thanks to an anatomical rearrangement of fish-style nostrils. That same rearrangement may explain why cleft lips and cleft palates are common birth defects in humans.
The nasal passages of land vertebrates differ dramatically from their fish ancestors. In fishes, the nose is independent of the mouth and throat. Water enters the nasal sac through one pair of nostrils and exits through a second pair.
By contrast, land vertebrates - technically known as tetrapods, because of their four limbs - have nasal passages that open to the outside world through a pair of external nostrils, and to the throat through a pair of internal nostrils or choanae.
Many biologists suspect the choanae evolved from one pair of fish nostrils that migrated over millions of years to a new position inside the throat. To do that, however, the nostrils would have had to cross through the line of teeth at some point, a move that sceptics regarded as unlikely.
Perfect intermediate
Their doubts should vanish, thanks to a careful reconstruction of several fossilised skulls of the most primitive known ancestor of tetrapods, a fish known as Kenichthys campbelli, from Yunnan, China. In Kenichthys, the second pair of nostrils opens neither externally nor internally, but directly into a gap in the row of teeth (Nature, vol 432, p 94).
Its as if we were to have a nostril located on the upper jaw margin between the canine and the adjacent incisor, says Per Ahlberg of Uppsala University in Sweden, who did the study with Min Zhu of the Chinese Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology (IVPP) in Beijing.
In short, Kenichthys is a perfect intermediate, says John Maisey, a vertebrate palaeontologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
Developing human embryos have a gap in the same place in the upper jaw, which later fuses. If it fails to fuse, the result is a cleft palate or cleft lip. Most likely, then, these birth defects arise from the same developmental process that gave us the ability to breathe through our noses, says Ahlberg.
Bob Holmes
And oyster fossils confirm the origin of snot.
What a load of fish fossils.
Somebody post a photo of Henry Waxman, quick!
And 'Rat fossils confirm the origins of rectums (recta?).

Can the origin of boogers be far behind?
Hehehehe
OK, you beat me to that one.
ping
Better to let a little glimmer of knowledge shine than to remain in the darkness of ignorance.
Not the greatest sense of smell, but can he EVER whistle through his teeth!
Ah, at last we're getting some answers to the nostril question. The gaps are closing!
"They just found a fish with nostrils"
"How'd he smell?"
"Awful."
Interesting...
First thing that came to mind-
You can pick your friends, you can pick your nose...but you can't pick your friend's nose.
****
In short, Kenichthys is a perfect intermediate, says John Maisey, a vertebrate palaeontologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
Another one for the "no transitional fossils" crowd.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.