男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
World / Reporter's Journal

Discovery in Anhui sheds light on two scientific mysteries

By Chris Davis (China Daily USA) Updated: 2014-11-20 13:33

 Discovery in Anhui sheds light on two scientific mysteries

The fossil of a 248 million-year-old reptile hints at how life bounced back from Earth's worst mass extinction. Stefano broccoli / university of Milan / Ryosuke Motani / UC Davis

Ever since farmers in Xi'an accidently discovered what turned out to be a vast army of terracotta warriors, the world has gotten pretty used to treasures being unearthed in China, with its rich and mysterious past.

Recently, an international team of paleontologists working at the Majiashan Quarry outside of Hefei city in Anhui province unearthed a different kind of treasure, one that provides a missing link and helps begin to answer a couple of big questions.

The first involves the mighty and ferocious Ichthyosaur, the giant dolphin-shaped reptile that ruled the Jurassic oceans - just as T-Rex ruled the land - during the age of the dinosaurs 150 million to 200 million years ago. Nicknamed "Sea Monsters", they were as long a tractor trailer, armed with a long snout and jaws filled with teeth and propelled by four powerful fins and a tail that made them deadly swift swimmers.

Just like whales and dolphins which evolved from land mammals that took to the water, Ichthyosaurs were air-breathing and gave head-first birth to live young - another fact evidenced by fossils found in Anhui.

Discovery in Anhui sheds light on two scientific mysteriesBased on fossil evidence, scientists knew that Ichthyosaurs had also evolved from terrestrial reptiles that at some point had taken to the seas. But there has never been any evidence of the transitional creature that made the first move. Until now.

Leading a team of scientists from the United States, China and Italy, Prof Ryosuke Motani of the University of California, Davis, announced in the journal Nature last week that they had found the missing link.

Dubbed Cartorhynchus lenticarpus, it is the smallest Ichthyosaur ever found, its total body length being a mere 16 inches, and it's about 248 million years old, a key date.

"When I first saw the animal, I was really puzzled," Motani told National Geographic, which helped fund the work.

Unlike its giant descendants who were completely adapted to a predatory life in the sea, this reptile had proportionately large flippers with flexible "wrists" that allowed it to move about on land much as seals and walruses do.

"There nothing that prevents it from coming onto land," said Motani in a statement released by UC-Davis. "Now we have this fossil showing the transition."

It also has thicker bones, which lines up with the idea that most land reptiles that transitioned to the sea became heavier with stubby limbs and thicker ribs to allow them to swim through the rough coastal waves and reach deep food-rich waters.

With that body shape, however, the creature probably wasn't a very fast swimmer and likely lived on shrimp and soft bottom-dwelling creatures on the seabed. The skull shape suggests what scientists call a suction feeder, in effect vacuuming up prey, a far cry from their descendants who would have their pick of the ocean's menu.

Motani made the point that this discovery goes beyond providing a missing piece to an evolutionary puzzle. It begins to answer an even greater mystery.

This animal lived 4 million years after the most cataclysmic event in Earth's history, the Permian-Triassic mass extinction 252 million years ago - colloquially knows as "the great dying" - when more than 96 percent of all marine species and 70 percent of all terrestrial species went extinct.

Scientists are hungry for evidence of how long it took animals and plants to bounce back from that catastrophic die-off, particularly since the extinction was associated with global warming.

"This was analogous to what might happen if the world gets warmer and warmer," Motani said. "How long did it take before the globe was good enough for predators like this to reappear? In that world, many things became extinct, but it started something new. These reptiles came out during this recovery."

In addition to UC-Davis, the research team included scientists from Peking University, Anhui Geological Museum, the Chinese Academy of Science, University of Milan and the Field Museum in Chicago. The study was funded by the National Geographic Society, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, Nanjing Institute of Geology of Palaeontology and Anhui province.

Contact the writer at chrisdavis@chinadailyusa.com.

Trudeau visits Sina Weibo
May gets little gasp as EU extends deadline for sufficient progress in Brexit talks
Ethiopian FM urges strengthened Ethiopia-China ties
Yemen's ex-president Saleh, relatives killed by Houthis
Most Popular
Hot Topics

...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 无棣县| 固始县| 杨浦区| 焉耆| 大洼县| 石阡县| 思南县| 漯河市| 安泽县| 霞浦县| 土默特右旗| 岳西县| 太仓市| 商洛市| 通化市| 南漳县| 乳源| 广安市| 平昌县| 贵定县| 宜良县| 汕头市| 陇川县| 浏阳市| 通山县| 安图县| 清徐县| 民乐县| 龙泉市| 民丰县| 安义县| 铜梁县| 民丰县| 临猗县| 汝州市| 大姚县| 达拉特旗| 广宗县| 东方市| 乡城县| 阿克陶县| 刚察县| 马鞍山市| 青田县| 香港| 外汇| 永吉县| 南宁市| 密云县| 兴城市| 寿阳县| 六安市| 临江市| 天柱县| 林西县| 随州市| 新乡县| 永修县| 宝丰县| 方城县| 沐川县| 巨鹿县| 邵武市| 嘉荫县| 桓台县| 新化县| 重庆市| 读书| 宣武区| 句容市| 林周县| 昌宁县| 衡东县| 绩溪县| 故城县| 仁化县| 鄢陵县| 张家港市| 安福县| 澄江县| 上杭县| 菏泽市|