China Daily

Ancient penguin was as big as a grown man

-

WASHINGTON — Scientists have unearthed in New Zealand fossil bones of what might be the heavyweigh­t champion of the penguin world, a bird nearly 1.8 meters that thrived 55 to 60 million years ago, relatively soon after the demise of the dinosaurs.

Researcher­s said on Tuesday the ancient penguin, called Kumimanu biceae, weighed 101 kilograms, and was much bigger than the largest of these flightless seabirds alive today, the emperor penguin, which grows to 1.2 meters and about 40 kg.

The only ancient penguin yet discovered that might have been larger than Kumimanu is known only from a leg bone, said ornitholog­ist Gerald Mayr of the Senckenber­g Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt.

“Gigantism in penguins evolved more than once,” Mayr said.

Kumimanu, named after a creature from Maori folklore and the Maori word for bird, is the second-oldest known penguin. The older one, also from New Zealand, was 61 million years old.

Kumimanu’s partial skeleton lacks the skull. Mayr said other fossils indicate that the earliest penguins possessed much longer beaks than their modern relatives, useful for spearing fish.

“It would have been very impressive: as tall as many people, and a very solid, muscly animal built to withstand frequent deep dives to catch its prey,” said Alan Tennyson, vertebrate curator at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, another of the researcher­s in the study published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

“It would not have been the kind of bird that someone could catch alive. It would have been considerab­ly more powerful than a person.”

Kumimanu and other early penguins had already developed typical penguin features including flipper-like wings and an upright stance.

Studies suggest that early penguins were brownish, not the trademark black and white of today’s penguins, Mayr said.

Penguins are thought to have evolved from a flying ancestor perhaps resembling a cormorant, Mayr said.

The asteroid that doomed the dinosaurs 66 million years ago also eliminated the large marine reptiles that dominated the seas, clearing the way for fish-eating divers like penguins.

Kumimanu lived long before Antarctica’s glaciation. At the time, New Zealand and Antarctica were subtropica­l.

“It’s a common myth that penguins only live in very cold environmen­ts such as the Antarctic region,” Tennyson said.

“Today, Galapagos penguins live at the equator, and many fossils show that early forms of penguins lived in warm seas.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This illustrati­on shows the sizes of the ancient giant penguin and a human. On Tuesday, researcher­s announced their find of fossils from approximat­ely 55-60 million years ago, discovered in New Zealand, that put the creature at about 1.8 meters long...
PROVIDED BY ASSOCIATED PRESS This illustrati­on shows the sizes of the ancient giant penguin and a human. On Tuesday, researcher­s announced their find of fossils from approximat­ely 55-60 million years ago, discovered in New Zealand, that put the creature at about 1.8 meters long...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong