Friday, 27 May 2016

Astounding discoveries.

Hello and welcome to my latest edition to my paleontology blog. The focus this time is on some of the most famous and astounding discoveries in the world of paleontology. I have had a passion for this subject from a young age and really hope you enjoy the publication. As always thank you for reading and feel free to give feedback. 

Giant by name giant by nature.

When Professor Ralph von Koenisgswald, wandered off the streets of Hong Kong into a traditional Chinese apothercary shop in 1935, he must surely have had no idea of the landmark discovery he was about to make. The professor a much respected paleoanthropologist, became fascinated with one particular fossil. This fossil on closer inspection, he identified as a tooth specifically belonging to a primate but far bigger than anything he had seen before. These teeth had been for more than a century, dug up and sold as “dragons teeth “ to be used in Chinese medicine.
Von Koenisgswald, determined to unearth more specimens began his own quest and over the course of several years, discovered three more teeth. The creature these teeth belonged to he named gigantopithecus. Gigantopithecus translates as gigantic ape and with good reason, standing up to three metres high and weighing in at up to 540 kgs, this is the largest ape the world has ever seen.
Driven by the discovery and the thirst for more knowledge, Von Koenisgswald planned to unearth more answers to questions such as where the species had roamed and what supplemented such an enormous animal. Quite possibly he would have found the answers to these questions himself had fate not intervened with his enlisting to serve in World War 2. He would then become a prisoner captured by the Japanese and later taken to Java. Throughout this his specimens remained hidden in a milk bottle, buried in a friends garden on the same island.
Further research has revealed a surprising amount given that almost the entirety of the remains found over time are still teeth with a handful of jawbones. Living in South east Asia, gigantopithecus, would likely have been far too large to large to live its life in any other way than roaming the forest floor. It has also been suggested that walking may have occurred on two legs, thus saving the strain of carrying such a weight on the shoulders and wrists. The canine teeth short and blunt ideal for grinding and molars flattened with a layer of enamel, suitable for crushing food, support the idea the diet of this giant ape was high in fibre and omnivorous. Gigantopithecus became extinct approximately 200,000 years ago. Lack of food and the impact of early man are thought to be potential contributing factors towards its demise.

Image credit : https://d1o50x50snmhul.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/dn24861-1_800.jpg

A new world of predatory dinosaur.
The year of 1983 proved to be a hugely significant one for revelations about predatory dinosaurs. This was thanks to the hammer of William Walker an amateur fossil hunter exploring the clay pits of Dorking, Surrey. His astounding find, a claw of 30 centimetres in length was to announce the arrival of a new discovery to science. The claw belonged to a huge predatory dinosaur later named baryonx. Over a period of three weeks, two tonnes of rock were dug through to reveal what Angela Milner of the Natural History Museum descried as “probably the most complete dinosaur that’s ever been found in Britain”.
The finds revealed solid evidence of a new world of carnivorous dinosaur. With a long slender snout resembling that of a crocodile, and sharp, fluted pattern teeth, these seemed the perfection adaptions for a life hunting fish. Further inspection of where the stomach would have been confirmed beyond doubt those suspicions. Semi digested fossilised fish scales showed that this enormous predator to be an aquatic based hunter and opened up a whole new line of dinosaur discovery.

The lethal claw of baryonx. Image credit:http://www.dinowight.org.uk/baryclaw.jpg

Frozen in time.
A fossil discovered in the Gobi desert in 1971 is arguably one of the most incredible fossils ever found. A velociraptor and protoceratops forever frozen in a life and death struggle. Velociraptor slashing at the neck and belly of protaceratops who in return had the raptors right arm firmly clamped in its beak. The most likely causes of the abrupt end to the conflict would seen to be a sandstorm or the collapse of a dune. Whatever the case, this incredible find has allowed scientists to gain invaluable knowledge into attack and defence strategies of these incredible animals.


Forever locked in conflict. Image credit:http://dinotoyblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/FightVelo-pht-l.jpg
Dinosaur graveyard.
Roughly 76 million years ago the rains came and came hard over what would later become western Canada. While the flooding was a problem which could be avoided for many animals capable of flying or fleeing to pastures new or sanctuary in the tree tops, for a huge herd of centrosaurus it proved a death trap. Unable to escape, many hundreds perished, their remains encased in mud.
Their fate however has now been revealed to the world of palaeontology, thanks to events twelve thousand years ago. A glacier forced its way through rock, creating a valley which subsequently turned the mud into mudstone. The south Saskatchewan River now flows through this valley and while doing so erodes fossilised ones from its walls.
The bonebed named the Hilda mega-bonebed, covers 0.9 of a mile and in 2010 after ten years of hard work, its secrets where finally identified and revealed. To do this several sample areas were excavated, with the number of fossils found in each counted and multiplied to gain an understanding of how many remains rest forever ever in the inaccessible rock stratrum. The estimation of 667 centrosaurs provided proof that herds of this species of ceratopsian and quite possibly other ceratopsians were of far greater size than previously known potentially even going to a thousand or more in number.

Dino droppings.
Amusing as it may sound fossilised faeces known as coprolites are very valuate to scientists and an incredibly rare find. Coprolites not only allow scientists to gain an understanding of an animals diet they can also in the case of plant matter being discovered improve knowledge of plant evolution. This can occur if the remains of a plant are represented in a find millions of years earlier than its existence was previously known. The largest coprolite so far discovered is 17 centimetres in length and 6 inches across. The content comprising of bone chips leaves scientists to speculate this came from a tyrannosaurus rex.

Deadly trackways.
Deinonychus the predator the infamous exaggerated velociraptors in the Jurassic Park franchise are based on has left not just skeletal evidence of its existence behind. Trackways have revealed whilst running their dreaded claws one on each foot were held aloft ready to strike downwards on a victim. With these claws measuring five inches in length it is unsurprising that the name deinonychus means terrible claw.
Evidence has also emerged that these predators hunted in packs. Trackways have been found seemingly showing these dromaeosaurs running together, and fossilised teeth found in the remains of tenontosaurus. An ornithopod, tenontosaurus was more than twice the length of deinonychus and so it further fuels the speculation it may have taken more than one individual to bring about its demise.

Dinosaur nesting.
Maiasaura was a hadrosaur which lived in Montana during the late Cretaceous. The name maiasaura means good mother lizard and with good reason. During the 1970’s, a nesting site was discovered which would provide a remarkable insight into hadrosaur family life. The nests were two metres across and formed from low mud. The distance between nests was fractionally longer than the length of the adult hadrosaurs to prevent conflict while resting on the eggs.
The eggs themselves were positioned in a hollow on top of the mound while vegetation was placed on top of them. This acted like a compost heap producing warmth whilst it rotted. Nest remains were situated in successive rock layers, suggesting that these nesting grounds were revisited on a yearly basis. Ones from a variety of age ranges were discovered and imply not only did hatchlings live in the nest for a long period of time, they were also cared for until they had become well grown. Despite the best efforts of the parents however, remains of egg eating lizards and nest infecting beetles provide evidence of the threats they still faced and it seems inevitable the raids on the nest were sometimes successful.

Image credit :http://nature.nps.gov/geology/nationalfossilday/images/2014_artwork/11_Maisaura.jpg


The first bird.
It is 1861 and workers in a limestone quarry in Germany are just about to make an incredible discovery. A fossilised feather, the first one in history. Shortly afterwards almost the full remains of the animal were discovered. It was roughly the size of a magpie and its name given to it by German palaeontologist Hermann von Meyer meant “the ancient wing”. There can be no doubt; the discovery of archaeopteryx is surely one of the biggest in the palaeontology world.
Archaeopteryx in text books is classed as the first bird, however it is described as being the perfection illustration of transitional form between birds and dinosaurs. The bird features archaeopteryx possess are the covering of feathers and wing structure similar to those of modern day birds. Dinosaur features include tooth filled jaws and a long stiff tail. Such are the nature of these mix of features, that if the first specimen had been found without feathers, this remarkable animal would have been classed as a dinosaur rather than a bird.

Image credit :http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/birds/archie2.jpg

The misrepresentations of Iguanodon.

Crystal Palace Gardens. Image credit : http://www.newsshopper.co.uk/resources/images/4468548/

Iguanodon was only the second dinosaur to be discovered and quite possibly no other animal has been subject to so morphological misunderstanding.
The story of iguanodon began in the west Sussex village of Cuckfield in 1822. Gideon Mantell discovered fossilised teeth unlike those of which had been found previously. The teeth appeared to be those belonging to a herbivorous, land based animal. This assumption was initially met with heavy doubt from William Buckland and Georges Cuvier, an English geologist and French naturalist and zoologist respectively. They put the findings down to most likely belonging to an extinct species of rhino. Only after Buckland descried the remains of megalosaurus, the first meat eating dinosaur to be identified two years later, did he admit the teeth were reptilian but he countered most likely not herbivorous. Mantell energised by this new development, sent the teeth to Cuvier who then agreed they most likely belonging to a herbivorous reptilian. Mantel after being made aware of the similarities of the teeth to those of modern iguanas, decided to name his find iguanodon, meaning iguana –tooth.
The teeth alone were not enough to base what the animal may have looked like however, speculation really began when more complete remains where unearthed in Kent. Mantel made mistakes with his observations however, he portrayed iguanodon as predominantly moving on all fours, a long tail trailing behind on the ground and placed a horn on its nose. He did though get correctly showed the front legs being shorter than the hind legs and still portrayed a more accurate image than rival palaeontologist Richard Owen. Owen, a creationist against the theory of evolution, believed dinosaurs were not ancestors of modern day reptiles and instead were advanced mammal like creatures which had succumbed to extinction. He portrayed iguanodon as similar to rhinos and elephants and his ideas of them as squat quadrupeds were portrayed in Crystal Palace Park.
Owens portrayal was disposed of in 1878 when 38 iguanodon specimens were discovered in in a coalmine situated in Bernissart Belgium. This remains the largest discovery of iguanodon in history. Reconstructions were created under the guidance of Belgian palaeontologist Louis Dollo. He believed and showed iguanodon to have a posture similar to those of a wallaby or kangaroo standing on hind legs and using their tails for balance. The end in the tail has after further research been shown to be incorrect with the tail remaining straight thanks to one like tendons. He did correctly position the previously assumed horn, as a thumb spike. The role of spike is debated some feel it was used as antipredator strategy, while others believe it may have been used to break open hard shelled fruits.
Twentieth century research has shown that contrary to earlier beliefs, iguanodon held its whole body horizontally to the ground. It could walk on all fours or bipedally. It is suggested that age was a factor in how the individual largely moved presumably the older and heavier it became the more time was spent on all fours. Younger animals however may have spent the majority of their time walking upright.
Iguanodon was one of the first identified dinosaurs in history and surely one of the most misunderstood. It has taken 194 years for most of its secrets to be revealed and surely this in itself is the perfect illustration of how much we still have to learn about the mind blowing world of palaeontology. I hope you enjoy the log I really appreciate you reading and feel free to have a look at my Facebook page.
All the best,
George.
 https://www.facebook.com/reallywildwykes/

 Information was sourced from the following literature. 

Fifty animals that changed the course of history, Eric Chaline,
Dinosaurs the grand tour, Keiron Pim.
Natural History Museum Alive, Amabel Adcock.
The complete illustrated encyclopedia of dinosaurs and prehistoric creatures, Dougal Dixon. 
Dinosaurs rediscovered, Science Uncovered.