SILAHKAN MENGGUNAKAN " MESIN TRANSLATE "..GOOGLE TRANSLATE
DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
....................................
DISAMPING KANAN INI.............
PLEASE USE ........ "TRANSLATE MACHINE" .. GOOGLE TRANSLATE BESIDE RIGHT THIS
....................................
Ditemukan dinosaurus Tertua relatif dikenal
Oldest known dinosaur relative discovered
Date:
March 4,
2010
Source:
University of Utah
Summary:
Paleontologists have discovered a dinosaur-like animal
living 10 million years earlier than the oldest known dinosaurs. The
researchers suggest that dinosaurs and other close relatives might have also
lived much earlier than previously thought.
.........................
Until now, paleontologists have generally believed that the
closest relatives of dinosaurs possibly looked a little smaller in size, walked
on two legs and were carnivorous. However, a research team including Randall
Irmis, curator of paleontology at the Utah Museum of Natural History and
assistant professor in the Department of Geology and Geophysics at the
University of Utah has made a recent discovery to dispel this hypothesis.
The team
announced the discovery of a proto-dinosaur (dinosaur-like animal) -- a new
species called Asilisaurus kongwe (a-SEE-lee-SOAR-us KONG-way), derived
from asili (Swahili for ancestor or foundation), sauros (Greek for lizard), and
kongwe (Swahili for ancient). The first bones of Asilisaurus were
discovered in 2007, and it is the first proto-dinosaur recovered from the
Triassic Period in Africa. Asilisaurus shares many characteristics with
dinosaurs but falls just outside of the dinosaur family tree -- living
approximately 10 million years earlier than the oldest known dinosaurs.
The
description of the new species Asilisaurus kongwe appears in the March 4
issue of the journal Nature in a paper co-authored by an international
team, including Irmis, Sterling Nesbitt, a postdoctoral researcher at the
University of Texas at Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences, Christian A.
Sidor (Burke Museum and University of Washington), Kenneth D. Angielczyk (The
Field Museum, Chicago), Roger M.H. Smith (Iziko South African Museum, South
Africa), and Linda A. Tsuji (Museum für Naturkunde and Humboldt-Universität zu
Berlin, Germany).
Fossil bones
of at least 14 individuals were recovered from a single bone bed in southern
Tanzania making it possible to reconstruct nearly the entire skeleton, except
portions of the skull and hand. The individuals stood about 1.5 to 3 feet (0.5
to 1 meter) tall at the hips and were 3 to 10 feet (1 to 3 meters) long. They
weighed about 22 to 66 pounds (10 to 30 kilograms), walked on four legs, and
most likely ate plants or a combination of plants and meat.
"The
crazy thing about this new dinosaur discovery is that it is so very different
from what we all were expecting, especially the fact that it is herbivorous and
walked on four legs, said Irmis, who was involved in the researching the
discovery over the past three years.
Asilisaurus
kongwe is part of a newly recognized group
known as silesaurs. "We knew that there were a number of species from the
Triassic that were similar to Asilisaurus," said Irmis, "but
we were only able to recognize that they formed this group called silesaurs
with the new anatomical information from Asilisaurus." Members of
the silesaur group were distributed across the globe during the Triassic, when
all of the continents were together in a supercontinent called Pangaea.
Silesaurs
are the closest relatives of dinosaurs, analogous to the close relationship of
humans and chimps. Even though the oldest dinosaurs discovered so far are only
230 million years old, the presence of their closest relatives 10 million to 15
million years earlier implies that silesaurs and the dinosaur lineage had
already diverged from a common ancestor by 245 million years ago. Silesaurs
continued to live side by side with early dinosaurs throughout much of the
Triassic Period (between about 250 million and 200 million years ago). The
researchers conclude that other relatives of dinosaurs, such as pterosaurs
(flying reptiles) and small forms called lagerpetids, might have also
originated much earlier than previously thought.
Silesaurs
have triangular teeth and a lower jaw with a beak-like tip, suggesting that
they were specialized for an omnivorous and/or herbivorous diet. These same
traits evolved independently in at least two dinosaur lineages (ornithischians
and sauropodomorphs). In all three cases, the features evolved in animals that
were originally meat-eaters. Although difficult to prove, it's possible that
this shift conferred an evolutionary advantage. The researchers conclude that
the ability to shift diets may have lead to the evolutionary success of these
groups.
"The
research suggests that at least three times in the evolution of dinosaurs and
their closest relatives, meat-eating animals evolved into animals with diets
that included plants," said Irmis. "These shifts all occurred in less
than 10 million years, a relatively short time by geological standards, so we
think that the lineage leading to silesaurs and dinosaurs might have had a
greater flexibility in diet, and that this could be a reason for their
success."
This new
species (Asilisaurus) is found along with a number of primitive
crocodilian relatives in the same fossil beds in southern Tanzania. The
presence of these animals together at the same time and place suggests that the
diversification of the relatives of crocodilians and dinosaurs was rapid, and
happened earlier than previously suggested. It sheds light on a group of
animals that later came to dominate terrestrial ecosystems throughout the
Mesozoic Era (250 million to 65 million years ago).
"This
new research suggests that there are more groups of animals yet to be
discovered in this early period of dinosaur relatives," said Irmis.
"It's very exciting because the more we learn about the Triassic Period,
the more we learn about the origin of the dinosaurs and other groups."
Funding for
the research was provided by the National Geographic Society, Evolving Earth
Foundation, Grainger Foundation, and the National Science Foundation.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Utah. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Sterling J. Nesbitt, Christian A. Sidor, Randall B. Irmis, Kenneth D. Angielczyk, Roger M. H. Smith & Linda A. Tsuji. Ecologically distinct dinosaurian sister group shows early diversification of Ornithodira. Nature, 2010; 464 (7285): 95 DOI: 10.1038/nature08718