| Media
Contacts:
Dr. Julia A.
Clarke, 919/515-7648
Paul K. Mueller,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Feb.
11, 2004
Penguin
Bones from “Land of Fire” Rewrite Bird’s
Evolution
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 |
Fossilized
penguin bones found in Tierra del Fuego are the
oldest ever found in South America. |
Fossilized bones found in Tierra del
Fuego, Argentina, are likely those of the earliest known
South American penguin, which probably lived 20 million
years earlier than scientists had supposed. The new
find doubles the known fossil record of penguins in
South America.
That’s
the conclusion of Dr. Julia A. Clarke, assistant professor
of marine,
earth and atmospheric sciences at North Carolina
State University, and her colleagues from Argentina,
who published their findings in the December 2003 issue
of the journal Novitates of the American Museum
of Natural History (AMNH).
According to Clarke, the specimen consists
of parts of a pelvic girdle and a leg and dates to the
Eocene epoch of Earth’s history – about
40 million years ago – sometimes called the “early
age of mammals.” Found at Punta Torcida on Tierra
del Fuego’s Atlantic coast, the fossilized bones
are sufficiently different from known penguin anatomy
to rewrite the story of penguin evolution.
Tierra del Fuego, the southernmost portion
of the South American continent, means “land of
fire” in English. Argentinean geologist Eduardo
B. Olivero’s team discovered the fossils in 1999,
and Olivero asked Clarke to help identify the bones.
“This
early part of the penguin lineage must have arrived
in South America during a comparatively warm period
in Earth’s history,” said Clarke, “coincident
with the beginning of, or just before, a major global
cooling trend that occurred in the mid-Eocene. All other
penguin fossils date to long after that ‘icehouse’
phase began and after the Antarctic icecap is inferred
present.”
The
new find may tell a radically different story from previous
discoveries about penguins and their prehistoric travels.
Despite the popular association of penguins with cold
polar regions, said Clarke, species of the birds live
near the equators as well. The earliest penguins, then,
might have developed in warmer climates, and slowly
adapted as their habitats grew icier.
The scientists found portions of a pelvis,
a nearly complete right femur, a fragment of the left
femur and other bones. Details of the bones, and a careful
comparison of them to both fossil and modern penguin
bones, allowed them to unravel the evolutionary relationships
of the new fossil.
Clarke says that a larger, more comprehensive
study of the penguin family tree is necessary before
the full story of early penguins in the Land of Fire
can be told. But she’s confident that the discovery
will help clarify the timing and pattern of penguin
diversification.
“This is the first vertebrate
from that distant epoch ever found in Tierra del Fuego,”
she says. “As modest as these fossilized bones
are, they’ll tell us a great deal about the morphological
evolution of penguins and the travels of these birds
some 40 million years ago on a very different planet
Earth.”
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