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Rykster
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Fossil Overturns Ideas of Jurassic Mammals

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, AP Science Writer
Thu Feb 23, 5:13 PM ET

WASHINGTON - The discovery of a furry, beaver-like animal that lived at the time of dinosaurs has overturned more than a century of scientific thinking about Jurassic mammals.

The find shows that the ecological role of mammals in the time of dinosaurs was far greater than previously thought, said Zhe-Xi Luo, curator of vertebrate paleontology at Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.

The animal is the earliest swimming mammal to have been found and was the most primitive mammal to be preserved with fur, which is important to helping keep a constant body temperature, Luo said in a telephone interview.

For over a century, the stereotype of mammals living in that era has been of tiny, shrew-like creatures scurrying about in the underbrush trying to avoid the giant creatures that dominated the planet, Luo commented.

Now, a research team that included Luo has found that 164 million years ago, the newly discovered mammal with a flat, scaly tail like a beaver, vertebra like an otter and teeth like a seal was swimming in lakes and eating fish.

The team, led by Qiang Ji of the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences in Beijing, discovered the remains in the Inner Mongolia region of China. They report their findings in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

Matthew Carrano, curator of dinosaurs at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, called the find "a big deal."

An important factor is how specialized the creature was, said Carrano, who was not part of the research group.

"It gives a hint that early mammals were not just these shadowy creatures at the time of dinosaurs" but were having their own evolution. There have been hints of such animals in the past but nothing equal to the remains found by Luo and colleagues, he said.

Thomas Martin of the Research Institute Senckenberg in Frankfurt, Germany, said the discovery pushes back the mammal conquest of the waters by more than 100 million years.

"This exciting fossil is a further jigsaw puzzle piece in a series of recent discoveries," commented Martin, who was not part of Luo's team.

It's the first evidence that some ancient mammals were semi-aquatic, indicating a greater diversification than previously thought, the researchers said.

Modern semi-aquatic mammals such as beavers and otters and aquatic mammals like whales did not appear until between 55 million years ago and 25 million years ago, according to the researchers.

The new animal is not related to modern beavers or otters but has features similar to them. Thus the researchers named it Castorocauda lutrasimilis. Castoro from the Latin for beaver, cauda for tail, lutra for river otter and similis meaning similar.

The researchers found imprints of the fur, both guard hairs and short, dense under fur that would have kept water from the skin.

Weighing in at between 1.1 and 1.7 pounds, about the size of a small female platypus, Castorocauda is also the largest known Jurassic early mammal.

The research was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministry of Science and Technology of China, Chinese Ministry of Land Resources, National Geographic Society and Carnegie Museum.

___

On the Net:

Source: Yahoo News | Science: http://www.sciencemag.org
__Kratos__
Palaeontology section?

Pretty awesome, a mammal weighing less then 2 pounds though... wouldn't that fall into sync with fossils of mammals in the layers of rock after the dino's? So, maybe somehow some of them survived through whatever thing blew the dino's off the face of the planet? original.gif
Universal Absurdity
Definetly palentology, good call kratos

Its amazing that long held beliefs can be altered by a single find like this. Too bad it'll be 10-20 years before it ever gets into a high school text book geek.gif
aquatus1
Yeah, science does like to take it's time. What with this find, and that cat last year, the evidence is growing that large(ish) mammals have been around longer than we thought.
frogfish
Nice find
Rykster
Thanks Kratos, paleontology, DOTE!
See, I am a skeptic, but this is what I mean by being open minded. There are plenty of true wonders out here in my universe!
et's daddy
Newfound remains of a beaver-like creature suggest that mammals swam with dinosaurs.

This critter was a "giant among midgets," researchers said, dwarfing the other pint-sized mammals scurrying around during the Jurassic period.

It also holds the title of the first-known aquatic mammal, arriving on the scene nearly 100 million years before the previous record holder


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,185850,00.html

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angrycrustacean
laugh.gif 'Swam with dinosaurs'

Ah, Fox. Where would we be without you.
frogfish
There was already a thread on this...No need to make a new one.


Swam with the dinosaurs? I doubt many could swim...
et's daddy
QUOTE(frogfish @ Feb 25 2006, 10:14 PM) [snapback]1079638[/snapback]

There was already a thread on this...No need to make a new one.
Swam with the dinosaurs? I doubt many could swim...


http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/.../Swimming.shtml

there's 3

took me all of 2 minutes to find
frogfish
I doubt MANY could swim. 3 out of a possible 400 species....

BigDaddy_GFS
Edit-Was there any real reason for that comment? It was as pointless as it was crass, please refrain from this type of posting in the future.
-UA
Rykster
QUOTE(frogfish @ Feb 25 2006, 10:14 PM) [snapback]1079638[/snapback]
There was already a thread on this...No need to make a new one.
I made the original thread, then Saruman put it as a news topic. I think that is why there are two threads floating around. I imagine that the mods will eventually merge them.
hunter of all legends
why now after so many years we could find this thing now we have found giant squids isopods colecanths but we cant find a beaver
frogfish
Because this was a fossil...the others are living now...
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