Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Google Earth aids discovery of early African mammal fossils

Google Earth aids discovery of early African mammal fossils

April 29, 2009

ANN ARBOR, Mich.-A limestone countertop, a practiced eye and Google Earth all played roles in the discovery of a trove of fossils that may shed light on the origins of African wildlife.

The circuitous and serendipitous story, featuring University of Michigan paleontologists Philip Gingerich, Gregg Gunnell and Bill Sanders, is the subject of a segment on the award-winning television series "Wild Chronicles," currently airing on public television stations (Episode 412-Looking Back; check listings for local air dates). "Wild Chronicles" is produced by National Geographic Television and presented by WLIW21 in association with WNET.ORG.




The saga began when Gingerich, an authority on ancient whales, learned of a whale fossil from Egypt that had been discovered in a most unconventional way. At a stonecutting yard in Italy where blocks of stone from around the world are sliced up for countertops, masons had noticed what looked like cross-sections of a skeleton in slabs cut from a huge hunk of limestone imported from Egypt. Paleontologist Giovanni Bianucci of the University of Pisa recognized these as fossilized remains of a whale that lived in Egypt 40 million years ago, when the region was covered by ocean.

His curiosity piqued by the discovery, Gingerich wanted to visit the site where the limestone was quarried, but the exact location was something of a mystery. Bianucci had reported that the countertop whale came from a site near the Egyptian city of Sheikh Fadl, but a colleague in Egypt told Gingerich the quarry was probably farther east-exactly where, he wasn't sure.

Instead of setting out blindly across the desert, Gingerich sat down at his computer and clicked on Google Earth. After locating Sheikh Fadl, he scanned eastward until he found a range of limestone bluffs trailing across the desert like the backbone of some enormous serpent. Continuing his virtual expedition, Gingerich followed the bluffs, looking for roads branching off the main highway that might lead to quarries. Finally, about 75 miles east of Sheikh Fadl, he came across a road that traveled north to a deeply pocked area that just had to be a cluster of quarries.

Through associates in Egypt, Gingerich made arrangements to travel to Khasm el Raqaba, the area he had located on Google Earth. "Sure enough, when we got there, there was a huge quarry operation with trucks everywhere, blasting out blocks of limestone," said Gingerich,

who is the Ermine Cowles Case Collegiate Professor of Paleontology and director of the U-M Museum of Paleontology. Within minutes of seeing the site, though, Gingerich realized any whale fossils that might be there would be impossible to locate.

Scanning the scene, however, something else caught his eye: bands of red in the white limestone walls of the quarry. He quickly realized the red bands represented layers of loose soil that were blown into ancient caves.

"Suddenly it dawned on me: There should be animals preserved in that sediment, too, because caves often act as traps," Gingerich said. When he searched at the base of one rock outcrop, there were tiny bones everywhere.

Gingerich collected some of the fossils and took them back to the U-M Museum of Paleontology where Gunnell, an associate research scientist, began studying them and identified teeth and bones of fossil bats. Gunnell shared the materials with Ellen Miller of Wake Forest University, who found a few rodent jaws and some additional teeth. Recently, with funding from National Geographic Society, Gunnell, Miller, U-M assistant research scientist William Sanders and Ahmed El-Barkooky of Cairo University visited the site to collect more of the fossils, which may have an interesting story of their own.

The bones and teeth-remains of small mammals that lived in the early Miocene Epoch, some 18 to 20 million years ago-are the first small mammal fossils of that age to be found in Egypt. They may even represent some of the first mammals to migrate from Asia to Africa when the land bridge between the two continents first formed.

"It's likely that animals moving from Asia to Africa passed through the Khasm el Raqaba area," Gunnell said. Were the tiny bats, rats and other creatures whose fossils the researchers found among those very first migrants, the progenitors of today's iconic African wildlife?

"The record isn't good enough to pin that down yet," Gunnell said. "But when these animals are studied in detail, they should lead to a better understanding of biogeography and dispersal events between Asia and Africa and between North Africa and the rest of the African continent."

University of Michigan



Related Mammal Fossils Current Events and Mammal Fossils News Articles
Bone bed tells of life along California's ancient coastline
In the famed Sharktooth Hill Bone Bed near Bakersfield, Calif., shark teeth as big as a hand and weighing a pound each, intermixed with copious bones from extinct seals and whales, seem to tell of a 15-million-year-old killing ground.

Long-term study shows effect of climate change on animal diversity
Two species of giraffe, several rhinos and five elephant relatives, along with multitudes of rodents, bush pigs, horses, antelope and apes, once inhabited what is now northern Pakistan.

Hominid fossils from Ethiopia link ape-men to more distant human ancestors
New fossils discovered in the Afar desert of eastern Ethiopia are a missing link between our ape-man ancestors some 3.5 million years ago and more primitive hominids a million years older.
More Mammal Fossils Current Events and Mammal Fossils News Articles
After the Dinosaurs: The Age of Mammals (Life of the Past)

After the Dinosaurs: The Age of Mammals (Life of the Past)
by Donald R. Prothero (Author)

Perhaps nudged over the evolutionary cliff by a giant boloid striking the earth, the incredible and fascinating group of animals called dinosaurs became extinct some 65 million years ago (except for their feathered descendants). In their place evolved an enormous variety of land creatures, especially the mammals, which in their way were every bit as remarkable as their Mesozoic cousins.

The Age of Mammals, the Cenozoic Era, has never had its Jurassic Park, but it was an amazing time in earth’s history, populated by a wonderful assortment of bizarre animals. The rapid evolution of thousands of species of mammals brought forth gigantic hornless rhinos, sabertooth cats, mastodonts and mammoths, and many other creatures—including our own ancestors.

Their story is part of a...

A guide to the fossil mammals and birds in the Department of geology and p

A guide to the fossil mammals and birds in the Department of geology and p
by Old Classics



Fossils: Uncovering Clues to the Past

Fossils: Uncovering Clues to the Past

This DVD uncovers the many clues fossils reveal about Earths last 600 million years of life from the simplest organisms that colonized the oceans to the complex mammals that exist today. This "Fossils: Uncovering Clues to the Past" DVD, first published in 1993, is one of the Scott Resources' Earth Science DVD Video Library Series that takes a contemporary look at Planet Earth, its natural resources and the human impact on our global environment. Full-motion video and colorful computer graphics are mixed together in well-produced programs designed for the earth science classroom. Each comes with a complete teacher's guide including program objectives, discussion points, class activities and a glossary. Each DVD video is approximately 20 minutes in length, for grades 6-12. It is one of 19...

  TYRANNOSAURUS - FOSSILS (KIDS transfer) T-Shirt - 100% Fine Jersey Combed Cotton MENS / UNISEX T-Shirt - Sweat Shop Free (Small, Navy)
by American Apparel

Style 2001 American Apparel T-Shirt; 100% Combed Cotton - You can feel the difference between our high quality cotton and the cotton of other leading brands. Our cotton is noticeably softer and smoother because it's combed, spun tighter and woven finer. This lightweight fine jersey is exceptionally smooth and tight-knit, making it just as opaque as a much heavier fabric. Fine Jersey Cotton - Made in the USA; Superior color fastness; Minimal shrinkage; Machine Wash & Dry Low; Fabric Weight 4.3 oz/yd2 (146 g/m2); Made of 100% fine ring-spun combed cotton. High Quality Professional Transfers Used. PLEASE ENSURE YOU ORDER THE CORRECT SIZE AS THESE T-SHIRTS ARE CUSTOM-MADE FOR YOU. AMERICAN APPAREL T-SHIRTS ARE A TIGHT FIT SO MEASURE YOURSELF TWICE AND ORDER ONCE. **** REFER TO THE...

The Origin and Evolution of Mammals (Oxford Biology)

The Origin and Evolution of Mammals (Oxford Biology)
by T. S. Kemp (Author)

Mammals are the dominant large animals of today, occurring in virtually every environment. This book is an account of the remarkable fossil records that document their origin since the extinction of the dinosaurs. Tracing their evolution over the last 35 million years. For the first time presented in one single volume Kemp unveils the exciting DNA sequence evidence which coupled with fossil evidence challenges current thinking on the relationships amongst mammal and their inferred history.


15th-Century Petroglyph Showing a Warrior with a Bear-Claw Shield Premium Photographic Poster Print by Ira Block, 12x16

15th-Century Petroglyph Showing a Warrior with a Bear-Claw Shield Premium Photographic Poster Print by Ira Block, 12x16
by AllPosters.com

AllPosters.com is the world's #1 seller of posters, prints, photographs, specialty products and framed art. We're dedicated to bringing our customers the best selection of high quality wall décor that is perfect for their home or office. Browse our catalog of over 300,000 items that include entertainment and specialty posters, decorative prints, and art reproductions. Whether you're looking for your favorite movie or music poster, a framed Monet reproduction, or a print of the Eiffel Tower you will find it at AllPosters.com. Visit our Amazon store today at www.amazon.com/allposters to find Special Offers and search by subject category or artist. AllPosters.com provides unmatched service with a 100% satisfaction guarantee. We ship internationally to over 80 countries. Decorate your...

National Geographic Prehistoric Mammals

National Geographic Prehistoric Mammals
by Alan Turner (Author)



Ice Age Mammals of North America

Ice Age Mammals of North America
by Ian Lange (Author), illustrator Dorothy S. Norton (Illustrator)

The time is the Pleistocene epoch, about 2 million to 10,000 years ago. Continent-size ice sheets cover 30 percent of the earth's landmass, and strange creatures rove the landscape. Ice Age Mammals of North America transports you to the world of saber-tooth cats, woolly mammoths, four-hundred-pound beavers, and twenty-foot-tall ground sloths. Illustrated descriptions of the animals form the heart of the book and the final chapter explores why so many of these animals were extinct by the end of Pleistocene time.

  Mammal Evolution: An Illustrated
by R.J.G. Savage (Author)



Pleistocene Mammals of Europe

Pleistocene Mammals of Europe
by Bjorn Kurten (Author)

This book provides a comprehensive treatment of all the Pleistocene species in Europe, classified according to modern taxonomic principles. For each species, there is a description of its descent and migration history, its range, and its mode of life. The first version of this book was a semi popular paperback in the Swedish Aldus series. The present edition is completely rewritten and greatly expanded, but retains the non-technical approach to make the story accessible to readers with varying backgrounds. The first part of the book is an outline of the Pleistocene history of Europe, with its climatic changes and succession of mammalian faunas. In the second part are listed all the species of Mammalia known from the Pleistocene and Postglacial of Europe, with the evolution, range in time...

© 2009 BrightSurf.com