Fossil of 43-million-year-old penguin skin found in Argentina
Buenos Aires: Argentine researchers have announced the discovery of fossilized skin on the remains of the wing of a 43-million-year-old penguin on Marambio Island in the Antarctic.
The fossil was actually discovered during a research mission in 2014.
The fossil was then studied at the La Plata Museum by Argentine paleontologist Carolina Acosta Hospitaleche, the agency for scientific disclosure at La Matanza National University said on Friday.
The fossilized belongs to skin the
Jointed wing of a 43 million-year-old penguin founded at the Marambio Island, Antarctica, on Friday.
Palaeeudyptes gunnari, one of the many extinct types of penguins that lived in Antarctica during
the Eocene period, which lasted from around 56 to 34 million years ago.
At that time, Antarctica was covered in woodland and boasted a diverse fauna.
“The fossilization of the skin of this wing is unique because it’s the first conserved example in the world of a penguin with skin,” said Acosta Hospitaleche.
“The skin was conserved as a fossil on both surfaces of its wing, enveloping the bones that have remained articulated in their original position,” she added.
Earlier in 2019, scientists had unearthed the heaviest known elasmosaur, an ancient aquatic reptile that swam the seas of the Cretaceous period alongside the dinosaurs.
The animal would have weighed as much as 15 tons, and it is now one of the most complete ancient reptile fossils ever discovered in Antarctica. Plesiosaurs generally look a little like large manatees with giraffe necks and snakelike heads, though they have four flippers rather than a manatee’s three.