The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Feeds

Chinese boffins discover bizarro fish-oid creature with FOUR LIMBS

  • alert
  • print
  • comment
  • tweet

The THING that crawled OUT OF THE SWAMP

Free whitepaper – Enabling Datacenter and Cloud Service Management for Mid-Tier Enterprises

Chinese boffins have discovered fossil remains of what they believe is the world’s oldest stem tetrapod – a four-limbed fish-like creature. The discovery could provide vital clues about the evolutionary path of vertebrates from sea to land.

Zhu Min and his research team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, published their findings in Nature Communications this week.

They found the critter, named Tungsenia paradoxa apparently in memory of renowned Chinese geologist Liu Dongsheng, in Yunnan province, south-west China.

The new stem tetrapod is from the early Devonian period of around 409 million years ago, 10 million years earlier than the previous earliest record of these creatures - the finned Kenichthys.

A lack of fossil data has historically limited scientists’ knowledge of the morphological sequence between tetrapods and lungfishes, and with it “fin-to-limb transition”.

This discovery has apparently closed the gap between the oldest recorded lungfish fossil and the oldest stem tetrapod from 16 million to around six million years.

The researchers had the following to say about the x-ray image of the fossil skull:

The enlargement of the cerebral hemispheres and the possible presence of the pars tuberalis in this stem-tetrapod indicate that some important brain modifications related to terrestrial life had occurred at the beginning of the tetrapod evolution, much earlier than previously thought.

®

Free whitepaper – AccelOps’ Unified Infrastructure Management Examined

Spotlight

Colossal ethylene eructation 'bigger than Earth'
Lone darkness-wrapped suns fingered in infrared conundrum
And your mum, other grandmas. Grandads not mentioned
The Soyuz TMA-06M launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan to the International Space Station at 6:51 a.m. EDT. NASA astronaut Kevin Ford and Russian cosmonauts Oleg Novitskiy and Evgeny Tarelkin now are safely in orbit. credit: NASA
Baikonur blastoff boosts Soyuz to station
Boffins spot X-ray blasting, star-stopping cosmic jet
Startled diver 'given orders in English,' say boffins
Solving super-luminal Special Relativity without breaking Einstein
Rui in the pit, levelling the first tube
A profound, earth-moving experience
Possibly record-breaking buttocks stun boffinry world
Aussie lad rediscovers hard-as-nails killer insect