It's All In The Hips: Early Whales Used Well Developed Back Legs For Swimming, Fossils Show
By SCIENCE DAILY
Added: Wed, 17 Sep 2008 23:00:00 UTC
Thanks to GP for the link.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080917210028.htm
It's All In The Hips: Early Whales Used Well Developed Back Legs For Swimming, Fossils Show
ScienceDaily (Sep. 18, 2008) — The crashing of the enormous fluked tail on the surface of the ocean is a "calling card" of modern whales. Living whales have no back legs, and their front legs take the form of flippers that allow them to steer. Their special tails provide the powerful thrust necessary to move their huge bulk. Yet this has not always been the case.
Reporting in the latest issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, paleontologist Mark D. Uhen of the Alabama Museum of Natural History describes new fossils from Alabama and Mississippi that pinpoint where tail flukes developed in the evolution of whales.
"We know that the earliest whales were four-footed, semi-aquatic animals, and we knew that some later early whales had tail flukes, but we didn't know exactly when the flukes first arose," said Uhen. "Now we do."
The most complete fossil described in the study is a species called Georgiacetus vogtlensis. Although not new to science, the new fossils provide some very significant new information. In particular, previously unknown bones from the tail show that it lacked a tail fluke. On the other hand, it did have large back feet and Uhen suggests that it used them as hydrofoils. Undulating the body in the hip region was the key factor in the evolution of swimming.
The very different body forms seen in the lineage of whales point to very different methods of swimming underwater. Previous studies have proposed a possible process to evolve from the ancestral form, paddling with all four legs, to the modern-day whale in which the tail oscillates up and down. Living vertebrates that are capable swimmers employ a whole range of different techniques, including five particularly well defined methods: quadrupedal paddling, paddling only using the back legs, undulation of the hips, tail undulation, and tail oscillation.
Interestingly, it had been suggested that during whale evolution each of these steps occurred in turn, but that the hip undulation stage might have been by-passed. The new discoveries indicate that the complete opposite was true, and as Uhen says "wiggling hips were a significant step in the evolution of underwater swimming in whales."
So now we know that Elvis was not the first to owe success to undulating hips!
Tweet
RELATED CONTENT
Ancient walking mystery deepens
Helen Briggs - BBC News - Science &... 3 Comments
One of the first creatures to step on land could not have walked on four legs, 3D computer models show.
Human Races May Have Biological...
Razib Khan - The Crux - Discover... 89 Comments
Human Races May Have Biological Meaning, But Races Mean Nothing About Humanity
Darwinian Selection Continues to...
- - ScienceDaily 45 Comments
New evidence proves humans are continuing to evolve and that significant natural and sexual selection is still taking place in our species in the modern world.
Where's the Beef? Early Humans Took It
Ann Gibbons - Science - AAAS.org 7 Comments
Cool cats. The skull and jaw of two different species of extinct saber-toothed cats, which lived during the heyday of carnivores 3 million to 3.5 million years ago in the Turkana Basin of Kenya.
Credit: Lars Werdelin/© National Museums of Kenya
Rare Protozoan from Sludge in Norwegian...
- - ScienceDaily 29 Comments
Rare Protozoan from Sludge in Norwegian Lake Does Not Fit On Main Branches of Tree of Life
MORE BY SCIENCE DAILY
Primates' Unique Gene Regulation...
Science Daily - sciencedaily.com 19 Comments
New View of Human Evolution? 3.2...
Science Daily - sciencedaily.com 35 Comments
Human Sperm Gene Is 600 Million Years...
Science Daily - Science Daily 14 Comments
When Evolution Is Not So Slow And...
Science Daily 18 Comments
Not Just Through The Eyes: Squid...
Science Daily 14 Comments
New Hominid 12 Million Years Old Found...
Science Daily 29 Comments




















Comments
Comment RSS Feed
Please sign in or register to comment
View Comments Page