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Crist Ero
05-20-2009, 03:17 PM
Missing Link Found? 47 Million-Year-Old Primate Fossil Revealed
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First Posted: 05-20-09 08:01 AM | Updated: 05-20-09 08:43 AM

Share Print CommentsScientists say they have found a primate fossil that shows our connection with other mammals and our earliest human ancestor. Full details from the University of Oslo and the Senckenberg Research Institute:

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Scientists announced on Tuesday in New York the discovery of a 47 million year old human ancestor. For the past two years, an international team of scientists, led by world-renowned Norwegian fossil scientist Dr Jørn Hurum, University of Oslo Natural History Museum, has secretly conducted a detailed forensic analysis of the extraordinary fossil, studying the data to decode humankind's ancient origins. At 95% complete, Ida is set to revolutionize our understanding of human evolution.

Discovered in Messel Pit, Germany, the fossil is twenty times older than most fossils that explain human evolution. Known as 'Ida', the fossil is a transitional species showing characteristics from the very primitive non-human evolutionary line (prosimians, such as lemurs), but she is more related to the human evolutionary line (anthropoids, such as monkeys, apes and humans). This places Ida at the very root of anthropoid evolution - when primates were first developing the features that would evolve into our own. The scientists' findings are published by PLoS ONE, the peer reviewed open access journal from the Public Library of Science.

From the upcoming film, "The Link":




Unlike Lucy and other famous primate fossils found in Africa's Cradle of Mankind, Ida is a European fossil, preserved in Germany's Messel Pit; the mile-wide crater and oil-rich shale is a significant site for fossils of the Eocene Epoch. Fossil analysis reveals that the prehistoric primate was a young female. Opposable big toes and nails confirm the fossil is a primate, and a foot bone called the talus bone links Ida directly to humans.

The fossil also features the complete soft body outline as well as the gut contents; a herbivore, Ida feasted on fruits, seeds and leaves before she died. X-rays reveal both baby and adult teeth, and the lack of a 'toothcomb' or a 'toilet claw' which is an attribute of lemurs. The scientists estimate Ida's age when she died to be approximately nine months, and she measured approximately three feet in length.

Ida lived 47 million years ago at a critical period in Earth's history. It fell within the Eocene Epoch, a time when the blueprints for modern mammals were being established. Following the extinction of dinosaurs, early horses, bats, whales and many other creatures including the first primates thrived on a subtropical planet. The Earth was just beginning to take the shape that we know and recognise today - the Himalayas were being formed and modern flora and fauna evolved. Land mammals, including primates, lived amid vast jungle.

Ida was found to be lacking two of the key anatomical features found in lemurs: a grooming claw on the second digit of the foot, and a fused row of teeth in the middle of her lower jaw known as a toothcomb. She has nails rather than the claw typical of non-anthropoid primates such as lemurs, and her teeth are similar to those of monkeys. Her forward facing eyes are like ours - which would have enabled her fields of vision to overlap, allowing 3D vision and an ability to judge distance.

Video of the missing link revelation in New York:




The fossil's hands show a humanlike opposable thumb. Like all primates, Ida has five fingers on each hand. Her opposable thumb would have provided a 'precision grip'. In Ida's case, this is useful for climbing and gathering fruit; in our case, it allows important human functions such as making tools, and writing. Ida would have also had flexible arms, which would have allowed her to use both hands for any task that cannot be done with one - like grabbing a piece of fruit. Like us, Ida also has quite short arms and legs.

Evidence in the talus bone links Ida to us. The bone has the same shape as in humans today. Only the human talus is obviously bigger. X-rays, CT scanning and computer tomography reveal Ida to be about nine months old when she died, and provide clues to her diet - which included berries and plants. Furthermore the lack of a bacculum (penis bone) means that the fossil was definitely female.

X-rays reveal that a broken wrist may have contributed to Ida's death - her left wrist was healing from a bad fracture. The scientists believe she was overcome by carbon dioxide gas whilst from drinking from the Messel lake: the still waters of the lake were often covered by a low lying blanket of the gas as a result of the volcanic forces that formed the lake and which were still active. Hampered by her broken wrist, Ida slipped into unconsciousness, was washed into the lake, and sunk to the bottom, where unique preservation conditions preserved her for 47 million years.

Cat slave
05-21-2009, 12:42 AM
Im sorry, that is a very interesting find, but I hardly think we are all related
to that! Maybe some on this board are though. Not you, just saying "some"
on this board...:D

mwillman
05-21-2009, 01:16 AM
Well she is more of a long lost cousin then a direct fore bearer but yes cat slave as much as your arrogance refused to let you face it we are descended from much more humble stock then even that interesting specimen.

You can deny 150 years of constant scientific testing and evaluation all you want but all it does is make you look foolish.

Cat slave
05-21-2009, 01:17 AM
Oh, stop taking yourself so seriously. It makes you boring.

mwillman
05-21-2009, 01:22 AM
Dont worry Cat I dont take myself to seriously.

I just love science.

Cat slave
05-21-2009, 01:31 AM
I love it too, but its always open to interpretation and changes frequently.
Somehow I dont feel related to my pond fish or the local coyotes. If Im
wrong we can all sing "we are familee, all my sisters and me".....like in
"Birdcage"...the movie.:D

mwillman
05-21-2009, 02:02 AM
The great thing about good science is its not open to interpretation.

Evolution is a fact.

The exact specifics of evolution are not all known but the fact that we evolved from monkeys is a fact.

The Professor
05-21-2009, 08:44 AM
i thought this thread was about what can get a dc junky BANNED...

y'know...

a missing LINK

LOL!

carry on

Cat slave
05-21-2009, 11:04 AM
The great thing about good science is its not open to interpretation.

Evolution is a fact.

The exact specifics of evolution are not all known but the fact that we evolved from monkeys is a fact.


Yes, the interpretation is almost always rethought and the outcome changes.
Give it a little while and they will come up with something else about the
fossil that makes its first perceived meaning moot.

I dont disbelieve evolution. I dont believe we are evolved from monkeys though.
If we are the product of a successful evolution from monkies, why are there
still monkeys? Normally evolution produces a species with hybrid vigor and
attributes that allows it to flourish better than the less adequate old model
and it phases out. The new model has some mutation that increases its
likelihood to survive....then that mutation is passed on to its prodigy etc.,
Simplistic??? It works for me.

Cat slave
05-21-2009, 11:05 AM
i thought this thread was about what can get a dc junky BANNED...

y'know...

a missing LINK

LOL!

carry on

LOL...:p ........

Independent Harry
05-21-2009, 11:07 AM
i thought this thread was about what can get a dc junky BANNED...

y'know...

a missing LINK

LOL!

carry on

No, not in this case, it appears the article is the missing link...:lmao2: