Tag Archives: fossil

Newly Discovered Fossil Named For David Attenborough Pushes Back Era of Toothless Birds by 50 Million Years – Good News Network

  1. Newly Discovered Fossil Named For David Attenborough Pushes Back Era of Toothless Birds by 50 Million Years Good News Network
  2. Cretaceous Enantiornithine Bird Was First of Its Kind with Toothless Beak Sci.News
  3. ‘Strange’ New Prehistoric Bird Discovered in China and Named for David Attenborough Smithsonian Magazine
  4. Field Museum researcher names groundbreaking new fossil after Sir David Attenborough Chicago Sun-Times
  5. “Attenborough’s Strange Bird” – Scientists Discover Unusual New Species That Defied Dinosaur Extinction SciTechDaily

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Climate summit leader said there’s ‘no science’ behind need to phase out fossil fuels, alarming scientists – CNN

  1. Climate summit leader said there’s ‘no science’ behind need to phase out fossil fuels, alarming scientists CNN
  2. Cop28 president says there is ‘no science’ behind demands for phase-out of fossil fuels The Guardian
  3. John Kerry responds to COP28 president’s claim there’s ‘no science’ behind fossil fuel phase out CNBC
  4. COP28 Climate Host: There’s ‘No Science’ Behind Calls to Eliminate Fossil Fuels Rolling Stone
  5. Cop28: UAE climate chief’s comments ‘incredibly concerning’ – as it happened The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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John Kerry responds to COP28 president’s claim there’s ‘no science’ behind fossil fuel phase out – CNBC

  1. John Kerry responds to COP28 president’s claim there’s ‘no science’ behind fossil fuel phase out CNBC
  2. Cop28 president says there is ‘no science’ behind demands for phase-out of fossil fuels The Guardian
  3. COP28 Climate Host: There’s ‘No Science’ Behind Calls to Eliminate Fossil Fuels Rolling Stone
  4. COP28 President’s Fossil Fuel Phase Out Talk Draws Condemnation Bloomberg
  5. Cop28: UAE climate chief’s comments ‘incredibly concerning’ – as it happened The Guardian
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Top energy regulator warns fossil fuel terminal shutdown could jeopardize heat for millions of Americans – Fox News

  1. Top energy regulator warns fossil fuel terminal shutdown could jeopardize heat for millions of Americans Fox News
  2. Two-Thirds of North America Could Face Power Shortages This Winter -NERC U.S. News & World Report
  3. Federal Regulators Urge Enhanced Winterization Standards for Natural Gas, Electricity Systems Natural Gas Intelligence
  4. Analysis finds 10 GW of solar could have dropped unserved load by 15% during Winter Storm Uri pv magazine USA
  5. Power grid again on the brink heading into winter, regulator warns The Washington Post
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Wimbledon: Demonstrators dragged off after dumping confetti on grass courts to protest fossil fuels – Yahoo Sports

  1. Wimbledon: Demonstrators dragged off after dumping confetti on grass courts to protest fossil fuels Yahoo Sports
  2. Just Stop Oil protesters interrupt play at Wimbledon The Times and The Sunday Times
  3. Controversy Erupts at Wimbledon as ‘Circus’-Like Scenes Unfold as Fans React in Dismay to Protestors Turning Grass to Clay in Bizarre Scenes EssentiallySports
  4. Just Stop Oil storms Wimbledon court with orange confetti The Telegraph
  5. Environmental activists disrupt play at Wimbledon during match on Court 18 and get arrested KTVN
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Whoopsies! Fossil From The Dawn Of Life Actually Just Bees – Defector

  1. Whoopsies! Fossil From The Dawn Of Life Actually Just Bees Defector
  2. New Evidence Suggests the Historic Dickinsonia Fossil Found At Bhimbetka Caves Was Actually A Beehive Print! The Weather Channel
  3. ‘Oldest animal fossil’ that rewrote India’s history turns out to be recently ‘decayed bee hive’ The Independent
  4. “Fossil” That Rewrote Indian Geologic History Is Actually A Beehive IFLScience
  5. ‘Beehive imprints’, not 550 mn-yr-old fossil: Bhimbetka find proven false, scientists accept mistake ThePrint
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Mistaken fossil rewrites history of Indian subcontinent for second time

What at first looked like a Dickinsonia fossil (on the left) had decayed and started peeling off the rock in just a few short years (on the right), a sign it was something much more modern. Credit: Gregory Retallack/Joe Meert

In 2020, amid the first pandemic lockdowns, a scientific conference scheduled to take place in India never happened.

But a group of geologists who were already on site decided to make the most of their time and visited the Bhimbetka Rock Shelters, a series of caves with ancient cave art near Bhopal, India. There, they spotted the fossil of Dickinsonia¸ a flat, elongated and primitive animal from before complex animals evolved. It marked the first-ever discovery of Dickinsonia in India.

The animal lived 550 million years ago, and the find seemed to settle once and for all the surprisingly controversial age of the rocks making up much of the Indian subcontinent. The find attracted the attention of The New York Times, The Weather Channel and the journal Nature as well as many Indian newspapers.

Only, it turns out, the “fossil” was a case of mistaken identity. The true culprit? Bees.

University of Florida researchers traveled to the site last year and discovered the object had seemingly decayed significantly—quite unusual for a fossil. What’s more, giant bee’s nests populate the site, and the mark spotted by the scientists in 2020 closely resembled the remains of these large hives.

The caves near Bhopal, India, host prehistoric cave art. Because they don’t have any fossils, they are hard to date. Credit: Joseph Meert

“As soon as I looked at it, I thought something’s not right here,” said Joseph Meert, a UF professor of geology and expert on the geology of the area. “The fossil was peeling off the rock.”

The erstwhile fossil was also lying nearly vertical along the walls of the caves, which didn’t make sense. Instead, Meert says, fossils in this area should only be visible flat on the floor or ceiling of the cave structures.

Meert collaborated on the investigation with his graduate students Samuel Kwafo and Ananya Singha and University of Rajasthan professor Manoj Pandit. They documented the rapid decay of the object and photographed similar remains from nearby beehives. The team published their findings of the mistaken identity Jan. 19 in the journal Gondwana Research, which previously published the report of the serendipitous Dickinsonia fossil find.

Gregory Retallack, professor emeritus at the University of Oregon and lead author of the original paper, says he and his co-authors agree with Meert’s findings that the object is really just a beehive. They are submitting a comment in support of the new paper to the journal.

This kind of self-correction is a bedrock principle of the scientific method. But the reality is that admitting errors is hard for scientists to do, and it doesn’t happen often.

Large beehives dot the site. After they are abandonded and decay, they briefly resemble fossils of the primitive animal Dickinsonia. Credit: Joseph Meert

“It is rare but essential for scientists to confess mistakes when new evidence is discovered,” Retallack said in an email.

Correcting the fossil record puts the age of the rocks back into contention. Because the rock formation doesn’t have any fossils from a known time period, dating it can be difficult.

Meert says the evidence continues to point to the rocks being closer to one billion years old. His team has used the radioactive decay of tiny crystals called zircons to date the rocks to that time period. And the magnetic signature of the rocks, which captures information about the Earth’s magnetic field when the rocks formed, closely matches the signatures of formations confidently dated to a billion years ago.

Other scientists have reported findings supporting a younger age. The time period is essential to understand because of its implications for the evolution of life in the area and how the Indian subcontinent formed.

“You might say, ‘Okay, well what’s the big deal if they are 550 million or a billion years old?’ Well, there are lots of implications,” Meert said. “One has to do with the paleogeography at the time, what was happening to continents, where the continents were located, how they were assembled. And it was a period when life was going through a major change, from very simple fossils to more complex fossils.”

“So trying to figure out the paleogeography at the time is very, very important. And in order to figure out the paleogeography, we have to know the age of the rocks,” he said.

More information:
Joseph G. Meert et al, Stinging News: ‘Dickinsonia’ discovered in the Upper Vindhyan of India not worth the buzz, Gondwana Research (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2023.01.003

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University of Florida

Citation:
Mistaken fossil rewrites history of Indian subcontinent for second time (2023, February 1)
retrieved 2 February 2023
from https://phys.org/news/2023-02-mistaken-fossil-rewrites-history-indian.html

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650-pound fossil whale skull found in Maryland

A Pennsylvania family discovered a 650-lb fossil whale skull on the Chesapeake Bay in southern Maryland.

Cody Goddard, his wife, and their son were on Matoaka Beach in Calvert County when they saw a large, hardened block of sediment laying on the beach. According to the Calvert Marine Museum, the sediment had an “unusual” fossil protruding from one end. 

The discovery was made in October, but due to the fossil’s sheer size, it took about two months for the fossil to be extracted.

The whale skull fossil was about five and a half feet long, 18 inches wide, and weighed approximately 650 pounds, according to the curator of paleontology at the Calvert Marine Museum, Stephen J. Godfrey.

Godfrey was contacted by Goddard about his discovery in October and worked with him to examine the large fossil.

Godfrey stated that the weight of the fossil mostly came, not from the skull itself, but from the unusual, cemented sediment that had formed around the skull.

“In a way, it created its own sarcophagus – its own little burial chamber that preserved it for millions of years and for us to be able to find,” he said.

A 650-pound fossilized whale skull was found in the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland.
Calvert Marine Museum/Facebook
The skull is estimated to be 12 million years old.
Calvert Marine Museum/Facebook

On Dec. 19, Godfrey and his team from the Calvert Marine Museum Fossil Club successfully removed the fossil from the beach and brought it to the bayside museum for further research.

According to Godfrey, the skull is around 12 million years old, based on the sediment age along Calvert Cliffs. The skull came from a baleen whale, a type of whale that uses its teeth to filter its prey, plankton, from ocean water.

Compared to modern baleen whales, such as humpback whales, the prehistoric whale the skull came from was quite small and narrow at 5 1/2 feet long and about 18 inches wide.

The fossil was originally discovered in October, but it took two months for it to be extracted.
Calvert Marine Museum/Facebook
Scientists will be able to determine which baleen whale species the skull belonged to after the sediment is removed.
Calvert Marine Museum/Facebook

“This would have been a very hydrodynamic type of whale, so it could probably swim fairly quickly,” Godfrey said. “And, of course, you’d want to because you have Megalodon swimming at that time, and you’re doing all you can to avoid being Megalodon’s next meal.”

Godfrey noted that the skull would be more completely analyzed in about two months, which will be the amount of time needed to remove the hardened sediment surrounding the skull.

When the skull is free of sediment, Godfrey and his team will be able to determine which baleen whale species the skull belonged to.

According to the Calvert Marine Museum, the skull — called “Cody” after Cody Goddard — is the most complete fossil whale skull ever recovered from that section of Calvert Cliffs. 

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Striking new images reveal beauty of forgotten, and largest, amber fossil of a flower

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Almost 40 million years ago a flower bloomed in a Baltic conifer forest. Dripping tree resin encased the petals and pollen, forever showcasing an ephemeral moment in our planet’s past.

Scientists have taken a fresh look at the unique amber fossil, which was first documented in 1872 as belonging to a pharmacist called Kowalewski in what’s now Kaliningrad, Russia.

The striking fossil had been languishing largely forgotten in the collection of the Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources in Berlin (BGR), according to Eva-Maria Sadowski, a postdoctoral researcher at the Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin’s natural history museum, and author of the new study.

She said she heard about the fossilized flower, officially known as specimen X4088, in passing from a retired colleague, who she thought was exaggerating.

“He told me that he once visited the BGR and that (he) saw the most amazing and largest amber flower in their collection. I was not aware that they had an amber collection. So I asked the curator of the BGR collection if I could come to see their collection – and there I found the specimen X4088,” she said via email.

“I was more than surprised to see such a large flower inclusion.”

At 28 millimeters (1.1 inches) across, it’s the largest known flower to be fossilized in amber – three times the size of similar fossils.

Sadowski extracted and examined pollen from the amber. She found that the flower had been misidentified when it was first studied.

“The original genus name of this specimen was Stewartia of the plant family Theaceae. But we could show in our study that this was not correct, mainly based on the pollen morphology. But when the specimen was first studied in the 19th century, they (had) not discovered or studied the pollen,” she said.

The flower is closely related to a genus of flowering plants common in Asia today known as Symplocos – shrubs or trees that sport white or yellow flowers.

Originally named Stewartia kowalewskii, the authors propose a new name for the flower of Symplocos kowalewskii.

Amber fossils offer a tantalizing, three dimensional look at the past. As well as plants and flowers, a dinosaur tail, a crab, a hell ant, a spider mom and her young, an ancient bird’s foot and a lizard’s skull have been found entombed in globs of tree resin.

The study was published in the journal Scientific Reports on Thursday.

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A 120 million-year-old dinosaur fossil with the bones of its final snack still inside of it reveals it enjoyed eating our ancestors

The fossil of a Microraptor with the bones of its last meal, a small mammal inside it.Hans Larsson

  • Paleontologist Hans Larsson found a small mammal foot in the rib of a dinosaur fossil.

  • The reptile was carnivorous and bird-like, according to McGill University.

  • It’s one of only 21 dinosaur fossils ever found with its food inside of it.

The key to a small, four-winged dinosaur species’ survival was not being fussy about what it ate, the examination of a rare fossil revealed.

Paleontologist Hans Larsson, a professor at McGill University, was the first to notice a small mammal foot lodged in between the bones of a fossilized Microraptor, a carnivorous dino with birdish wings. The discovery shows the dino ate a long list of animals, including mammals, fish, birds, and lizards, the university announced in a December 21 press release.

“These finds are the only solid evidence we have about the food consumption of these long-extinct animals – and they are exceptionally rare,” Larsson said in the release. The revelation that the animal was an “opportunistic” eater “puts a new perspective on how ancient ecosystems may have worked,” he added.

Only 20 other fossils have been found with the fossilized bones of their meals inside, according to McGill, and this is the first time a fossil has shown that any dinosaur ate mammals,  the Economic Times reported.

Microraptor fossils were first discovered in the early 2000s in Liaoning, China, located in the northeast part of the country along the Yellow Sea. Scientists have speculated that the species likely died out because it had four wings, and the two additional wings created drag when it moved.

Its ability to make a snack out of all kinds of animals may not have been enough for make up for two too many wings.

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