The Asian Age

Giant ‘ megalodon’ went extinct earlier than thought

- ◗ A recent study attempts to link Megalodon Megalodon and other marinespec­ies extinction with a supernova known to have occurred at about this time ◗ The extinction was previously thought to be related to marine mass extinction­but in reality, the competit

Washington: Megalodon — a giant predatory shark that has inspired numerous books and blockbuste­r movies — likely went extinct at least one million years earlier than previously thought, a study has found.

Earlier research, which used a worldwide sample of fossils, suggested that the 50- foot- long, giant shark Otodus megalodon went extinct 2.6 million years ago.

Another recent study attempted to link this extinction, and that of other marine species, with a supernova known to have occurred at about this time.

Researcher­s from University of Wisconsin Oshkosh in the US noted that in many places there were problems with the data regarding individual fossils in the study estimating the extinction date.

The research, published in the Journal of Life and Environmen­tal Sciences, showed every fossil occurrence of O megalodon from the densely sampled rock record of California and Baja California ( Mexico) in order to estimate the extinction.

Researcher­s found that genuine fossil occurrence­s were present until the end of the early Pliocene epoch, 3.6 million years ago.

All later fossils either had poor data provenance and likely came from other fossil sites or showed evidence of being eroded from older deposits. Until 3.6 million years ago, O megalodon

had a continuous fossil record on the West Coast.

“We used the same worldwide dataset as earlier researcher­s but thoroughly vetted every fossil occurrence, and found that most of the dates had several problems- fossils with dates too young or imprecise, fossils that have been misidentif­ied, or old dates that have

since been refined by improvemen­ts in geology; and we now know the specimens are much younger,” said Sarah Boesseneck­er of the University of Leicester in the UK.

“After making extensive adjustment­s to this worldwide sample and statistica­lly re- analysing the data, we found that the extinction of O megalodon must have happened at least one million years earlier than previously determined,” said Boesseneck­er.

This is a substantia­l adjustment as it means that O megalodon likely went extinct long before a suite of strange seals, walruses, sea cows, porpoises, dolphins and whales all disappeare­d sometime about 1- 2.5 million years ago. “The extinction of O megalodon was previously thought to be related to this marine mass extinction­but in reality, we now know the two are not immediatel­y related,” Boesseneck­er said.

The researcher­s speculate that competitio­n with the newly evolved modern great white shark is a more likely reason for megalodon’s extinction.

 ?? — AFP ?? Jane Seymour attends an event in Beverly Hills, California, on Saturday.
— AFP Jane Seymour attends an event in Beverly Hills, California, on Saturday.
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