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TOPIC: Ancient fossils


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Trilobites
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Swarms of up to a thousand giant trilobites - extinct marine arthropods such as this 90-centimeter-long fossil specimen - roamed shallow prehistoric seas, new fossils show.
The 465-million-year-old fossils, found recently in northern Portugal, are of the largest trilobites ever discovered.

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Hippocampus sarmaticus
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The oldest seahorse fossils discovered to date have been uncovered in Slovenia, including this five-centimetre-long adult female Hippocampus sarmaticus fossil.

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RE: Ancient fossils
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Scientists have found a "missing link" in the early evolution of seals from land mammals to the marine carnivores we see today.
Palaeontologists working in the North have discovered a skeleton in an ancient Arctic lake bed that has given them a glance of the animal's land-to-sea transition, which had been difficult to study because of a lack of fossil evidence.
The fossil skeleton, thought to be 20 to 24 million years old, was found in 2007 during an expedition to a meteor impact crater that once formed a lake on Devon Island, Nunavut.

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Schinderhannes bartelsi
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A missing link in the evolution of the front claw of living scorpions and horseshoe crabs was identified with the discovery of a 390 million-year-old fossil by researchers at Yale and the University of Bonn, Germany.
The specimen, named Schinderhannes bartelsi, was found fossilised in slate from a quarry near Bundenbach in Germany, a site that yields spectacularly durable pyrite-preserved fossils - findings collectively known as the Hunsrück Slate. The Hunsrück Slate has previously produced some of the most valuable clues to understanding the evolution of arthropods - including early shrimp-like forms, a scorpion and sea spiders as well as the ancient arthropods trilobites.

"With a head like the giant Cambrian aquatic predator Anomalocaris and a body like a modern arthropod, the specimen is the only known example of this unusual creature" - Derek Briggs, director of Yale's Peabody Museum of Natural History and an author of the paper appearing in the journal Science.          

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RE: Ancient fossils
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The discovery of fossilised remains belonging to the world's largest snake has been reported in Nature journal.
Titanoboa was 13m long - about the length of a bus - and lived in the rainforest of north-east Colombia 58-60 million years ago.
The snake was so wide it would have reached up to a person's hips, say researchers, who have estimated that it weighed more than a tonne.


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Titanoboa cerrejonensis
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A killer snake that was longer than a bus, as heavy as a small car and which could swallow an animal the size of a horse, has been discovered by scientists.
The 45 foot long monster - named Titanoboa cerrejonensis - was so big that it lived on a diet of crocodiles and giant turtles, squeezing them to death and devouring them whole.

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RE: Ancient fossils
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A recent study by researchers at the University of Bath and London's Natural History Museum has found that scientists' knowledge of the evolution of dinosaurs is remarkably complete.
Evolutionary biologists use two ways to study the evolution of prehistoric plants and animals: firstly they use radioactive dating techniques to put fossils in chronological order according to the age of the rocks in which they are found (stratigraphy); secondly they observe and classify the characteristics of fossilised remains according to their relatedness (morphology).
Dr Matthew Wills from the University of Bath's Department of Biology & Biochemistry worked with Dr Paul Barrett from the Natural History Museum and Julia Heathcote at Birkbeck College (London) to analyse statistical data from fossils of the four major groups of dinosaur to see how closely they matched their trees of evolutionary relatedness.
The researchers found that the fossil record for the dinosaurs studied, ranging from gigantic sauropods to two-legged meat eaters such as T. rex, matched very well with the evolutionary tree, meaning that the current view of evolution of these creatures is very accurate.

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Fossil collectors picked up some deals at Vancouver's Science World on Thursday after an auction of prehistoric bones failed to draw expected bids.
The fossils, which were mostly of dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals from North America, were part of Science World's latest exhibition, on display since October.

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Scientists discover new species of prehistoric giants
Dinosaur hunters on a month-long expedition to the Sahara desert have unearthed not one but two possible new species of extinct animals. Their success marks one of the most exciting discoveries to come out of Africa for 50 years.
The team have discovered what appears to be a new type of pterosaur and a previously unknown sauropod, a species of giant plant-eating dinosaur. Both would have lived almost one hundred million years ago.
The palaeontologists discovered a large fragment of beak from a giant flying reptile and a more than one metre long bone from a sauropod, which indicates an animal of almost 20 metres  in length. The discovery of both is extremely rare.

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A homeowner whose beachfront property in Texas was destroyed during Hurricane Ike has found a football-size fossil tooth in the debris.
Dorothy Sisk asked her colleague, Lamar University paleontologist Jim Westgate, to accompany her to her Bolivar Peninsula home after Ike hit. Together they found something unusual in the remains of Sisk's front yard: a six-pound fossil tooth.

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