megalodon
[魚類] 中級會員
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註冊 2008-6-13 來自 HK/UK
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[廣告]:
New two-million-year-old fox fossil found at Sterkfontein
http://www.timeslive.co.za/scite ... und-at-sterkfontein
Medial view of fox mandibles. A: Vulpes Skinneri. B: V. chama; C: V. zerda; D: V. vulpes; E: O. megalotis.
Image by: Adam Hartstone-Rose, Brian F. Kuhn, Shahed Nalla, Lars Werdelin & Lee R. BergerThe Library / University of Witwatersrand
A two million-year-old fox fossil has been discovered at an archaeological dig at the Cradle of Humankind world heritage site in Sterkfontein, Gauteng, researchers announced.
"It's exciting to see a new fossil fox. The ancestry of foxes is perhaps the most poorly known among African carnivores and to see a potential ancestral form of living foxes is wonderful," said Dr Brian Kuhn, of the University of the Witwatersrand's Institute for Human Evolution (IHE).
The discovery was announced by South African and international scientists.
In an article published in the Transactions of the Royal Society of SA, the researchers named the previously unknown species of fox "Vulpes Skinneri".
It was named in honour of the recently deceased South African mammalogist and ecologist, Prof John Skinner, from the University of Pretoria.
The fossils, which were found at the Malapa archaeological site, consist of a mandible and parts of the skeleton.
The researchers said the fox could be distinguished from any living or extinct form of fox based on the proportions of its teeth and other aspects of its anatomy.
The skeleton of a new species of human ancestor, named Australopithecus sediba, was discovered at the same site in Malapa in 2008, and was announced to the public in 2010.
Prof Lee Berger, of the IHE, said the Malapa site was extraordinary.
"Malapa continues to reveal this extraordinary record of past life and... the site's contribution to our understanding of the evolution of modern African mammals through wonderful specimens like this fox is of equal import," he said.
"Who knows what we will find next?"
The authors of the article wrote that Skinner would have been privileged to have the extinct animal named after him.
"We [the authors] think that John would be pleased, and it is fitting that this rare little find will carry his name forever," they wrote.
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