The Asian Age

S. African fossils rewrite history of life on land

-

Washington: Fossils of two amphibians that lived within the Antarctic circle 360 million years ago are forcing scientists to rethink the origins of land vertebrate­s, including where these pioneers first appeared and the climatic conditions that spawned them. Scientists said on Thursday they have unearthed partial remains of primitive Devonian Period amphibians named Tutusius umlambo and Umzantsia amazana at a site called Waterloo Farm near Grahamstow­n, South Africa. While the fossils are fragmentar­y, the researcher­s said Tutusius and Umzantsia most likely shared the fourlegged, alligator- crossedwit­ha- fish body plan of the earliest amphibians, eating small fish while in the water and perhaps small invertebra­tes while on land. Umzantsia was about 28 inches long ( 70 cm) with a long, slender lower jaw, apparently armed with small pointed teeth. Tutusius, known from a single shoulder girdle bone, was about a yard ( meter) long. It was named in honor of South African Anglican cleric and human rights activist Desmond Tutu. They were among the early wave of tetrapods, a group including all land- living vertebrate­s. The first tetrapods evolved from fish during the Devonian. Until now, it had been thought that this evolution revolution occurred in warm climes because the fossils of all the earliestkn­own amphibians, as well as their fish forerunner­s, had been found in places that were tropical or subtropica­l at the time. Africa during the Devonian was part of a super- continent called Gondwana that also encompasse­d South America, India, Australia and Antarctica. The Waterloo Farm site was within the Arctic circle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India