Translation from English

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

News from Chile- CBC News


Ichthyosaur fossil graveyard found in Chile

46 skeletons of ancient dolphin-like reptile found

Thomson Reuters Posted: Jun 04, 2014 9:07 AM ET Last Updated: Jun 04, 2014 9:46 AM ET
The  ichthyosaur fossils were found by glaciologists near the Tyndall glacier in southern Chile. They had likely been recently exposed as the glacier receded.
The ichthyosaur fossils were found by glaciologists near the Tyndall glacier in southern Chile. They had likely been recently exposed as the glacier receded. (W. Stinnesbeck)
Paleontologists have discovered nearly 50 entire ichthyosaur fossils in southern Chile, calling the find one of the best to date.
Ichthyosaurs — which means "fish-lizard" — were dolphin-like marine lizards that lived around the time of the dinosaurs.
"This great ichthyosaur cemetery, the way the remains are deposited, is unique," Christian Salazar, paleontologist researcher and natural history museum curator, said on Tuesday.
"It's the most recent great find in their history. That's going to answer a lot of questions about how they became extinct, where they migrated to, how they lived."
The fossils of the dolphin-like creature were unearthed in the country's Torres del Paine National Park, whose spiky peaks and brilliant turquoise lakes make it a magnet for trekkers and nature lovers.
They included almost complete skeletons from 46 individuals from four different species. Some were adults, including pregnant females and their embryos (ichthyosaurs gave birth to live young, rather than laying eggs) and others were juveniles. The fossils preserved not just bones, but some rare soft tissue, said a news release from the Geological Society of America Bulletin, where the research was recently published.
Researchers said the marine reptiles, buried by rocks from the huge Tyndall Glacier, lived between the Triassic and Cretaceous periods, which extended from 250 million to 66 million years ago.
They are thought to have hunted in packs through a nearby submarine canyon for small fish and squid, said a news release from the University of Heidelberg.
The researchers believe the animals were probably drowned by powerful mudflows from nearby shores unleashed by earthquakes and avalanches as the continent broke apart during that period of geological history.
The fossils were found in about three months of excavating, Salazar added, and more were likely to be found.
Ichthyosaur fossil
Forty-six complete skeletons of ichthyosaurs were excavated over three months. (W. Stinnesbeck)
With files from CBC News

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered