The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Well-preserved four-legged prehistori­c whale fossil found in Peru

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WASHINGTON: Paleontolo­gists have found a well-preserved fossil of a four-legged amphibious ancestor of whales, a discovery that sheds new light on the mammals’ transition from land to the ocean.

The ancestors of whales and dolphins walked on Earth about 50 million years ago in the regions that now comprise India and Pakistan.

Paleontolo­gists have previously found partial fossils of the species in North America that were 41.2 million years old suggesting that by this time, the cetaceans had lost the ability to carry their own weight and walk the Earth.

The new specimen, described in a study published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, is 42.6 million years old and provides fresh informatio­n on the evolution of cetaceans.

The fossil was found about one kilometre inland from Peru’s Pacific coast, at Playa Media Luna.

Its mandibles grazed the desert soil and during excavation­s, the researcher­s found the lower jaw, teeth, vertebrae, ribs, parts of front and back legs, and even the whale ancestor’s long fingers that were likely webbed.

Based on its anatomy, the scientists say this cetacean of about four metres long could both walk and swim.

“Part of the tail’s vertebrae showed similariti­es with that of present-day semi-aquatic mammals like otters,” lead author Olivier Lambert of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences told AFP.

“This would therefore have been an animal that would have started to make growing use of its tail to swim, which differenti­ates it from older cetaceans in India and Pakistan.”

Pieces of four-legged whales were found in Egypt, Nigeria, Togo, Senegal and Western Sahara, but they were so fragmented that it was impossible to decisively conclude whether they could swim.

“This is the most complete specimen ever found for a fourlegged whale outside of India and Pakistan,” said Lambert. — AFP

 ??  ?? The newly discovered early whale Peregocetu­s, which lived about 43 million years ago, is pictured along the rocky shore of the southeaste­rn Pacific in this undated artistic reconstruc­tion obtained by Reuters. — Reuters photo
The newly discovered early whale Peregocetu­s, which lived about 43 million years ago, is pictured along the rocky shore of the southeaste­rn Pacific in this undated artistic reconstruc­tion obtained by Reuters. — Reuters photo

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