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dari dinosaurus di jejak kaki: silsilah dinosaurus muncul segera setelah
Permian kepunahan besar
Oldest evidence of dinosaurs in footprints: Dinosaur lineage emerged soon
after massive Permian extinction
Date:
October 6,
2010
Source:
American Museum of Natural History
Summary:
Scientists have found the oldest evidence of the
dinosaur lineage -- fossilized tracks. Just one or two million years after the
massive Permian-Triassic extinction, an animal smaller than a house cat walked
across fine mud in what is now Poland.
..........................
The oldest evidence of the dinosaur lineage -- fossilized
tracks -- is described in Proceedings of the Royal
Society B. Just one or two million years after the massive
Permian-Triassic extinction, an animal smaller than a house cat walked across
fine mud in what is now Poland.
This
fossilized trackway places the very closest relatives of dinosaurs on Earth
about 250 million years ago -- 5 to 9 million years earlier than previously
described fossilized skeletal material has indicated. The paper also described
the 246-million-year-old Sphingopus footprints, the oldest evidence of a
bipedal and large-bodied dinosaur.
"We see
the closest dinosaur cousins immediately after the worst mass extinction,"
says Stephen Brusatte, a graduate student affiliated with the Division of
Paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History. "The biggest
crisis in the history of life also created one of the greatest opportunities in
the history of life by emptying the landscape and making it possible for
dinosaurs to evolve."
The new
paper analyzes three sets of footprints from three different sites in the Holy
Cross Mountains of central Poland. The sites, all quarries within a 25-mile
radius of each other, are windows into three ecosystems because they represent
different times periods. The Stryczowice trackway is the oldest at 250 million
years. The Baranów trackway is the most recent at 246 million years of age
while the Wióry trackway is sandwiched in time between the others.
Because
footprints are only an imprint of a small part of the skeleton, identification
of trackmakers is often tricky. Luckily, dinosaurs have a very distinctive
gait, especially when compared to their diapsid relatives (the evolutionary
group that includes birds, reptiles, and extinct lineages) like crocodiles and
lizards. While lizards and crocodiles have a splayed walking style, dinosaurs
place their two feet closer together. The footprints at all three Polish sites
show this feature as well as indisputable dinosaur-like features, including
three prominent central toes and reduced outer two toes, a parallel alignment
of these three digits (a bunched foot), and a straight back edge of footprints,
additional evidence of a dinosaur-like simple hinged ankle.
Because all
of these features are seen in footprints at the oldest site, Brusatte and
colleagues conclude that the Stryczowice prints -- which are only a few
centimeters in length -- are the oldest evidence of the dinosaur lineage. These
dinosaurs, though, are considered "stem dinosaurs," or the immediate
relatives of dinosaurs not part of the slightly more derived clade that
technically defines dinosaurs. Also, this animal did walk on all four limbs, an
abnormal posture for early dinosaurs and their close relatives, although it
appears that its forelimbs were already being reduced to more dinosaur-like
proportions since the footprints overstep handprints.
The Baranów
and Wióry trackways show changes early in the evolutionary history of
dinosaurs. Wióry at 248-249 million years ago shows slight diversification in
the types of tracks, but all tracks remain quadrupedal. Footprints from Baranów
at 246 million years ago, however, may be the earliest evidence of moderately
large-bodied and bipedal true dinosaurs. These tracks, which are called
Sphingopus, are 15 centimeters long.
"Poland
is a new frontier for understanding the earliest evolution of dinosaurs,"
says Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki of the University of Warsaw and the Polish Academy
of Sciences, who led the project and has been excavating footprints from the three
sites for nearly a decade. "It used to be that most of the important
fossils were from Argentina or the southwestern U.S., but in Poland we have
several sites that yield footprints and bones from the oldest dinosaurs and
their closest cousins, stretching throughout the entire Triassic Period."
Finally,
although the dinosaur group emerged soon after the Permian extinction,
dinosaur-like tracks are rare in the footprint assemblages, representing only
2-3 percent of the prints discovered as opposed to 40-50 percent for
crocodile-like archosaurs. Dinosaurs became more abundant tens of millions of
years later.
"For
the first 20-50 million years of dinosaur history, dinosaurs and their closest
relatives were living in the shadow of their much more diverse, successful, and
abundant crocodile-like cousins," says Brusatte. "The oldest
dinosaurs were small and rare."
In addition
to Brusatte and Niedźwiedzki, Richard Butler of the Bayerische Staatssammlung
für Paläontologie und Geologie in Germany was an author of the paper. Brusatte
is also affiliated with Columbia University. The research was funded in part by
the National Science Foundation, the Percy Sladen Fund, the Alexander von
Humboldt Research Fellowship, and the University of Warsaw.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by American Museum of Natural History. Note: Materials may be edited for
content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Stephen L. Brusatte, Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki, Richard J. Butler. Footprints pull origin and diversification of dinosaur stem lineage deep into Early Triassic. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2010; DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.1746