Tropical Turtle Fossil Found in Arctic

Thanks to Rob Singleton for the link.

Reposted from:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/tropicalturtlefossilfoundinarctic

fossil
The fossil of a tropical Asian freshwater turtle, found in the Canadian Arctic. The turtle has been named auroral. Credit: University of Rochester, John Tarduno et al.

The last place scientists expected to find the fossil of a freshwater, tropical turtle was in the Arctic. But they did.

The discovery, detailed today in the journal Geology, suggests animals migrated from Asia to North America not around Alaska, as once thought, but directly across a freshwater sea floating atop the warm, salty Arctic Ocean. It also provides additional evidence that a rapid influx of carbon dioxide some 90 million years ago was the likely cause of a super-greenhouse effect that created extraordinary heat in the polar region.

"We've known there's been an interchange of animals between Asia and North America in the late Cretaceous period, but this is the first example we have of a fossil in the High Arctic region showing how this migration may have taken place," said John Tarduno, professor of geophysics at the University of Rochester. "We're talking about extremely warm, ice-free conditions in the Arctic region, allowing migrations across the pole."

Turtles may be slow, but they're known to migrate long distances. Recent satellite tracking found a leatherback turtle traveled 12,774 miles (20,558 kilometers) from Indonesia to Oregon, one of the longest recorded migrations of any vertebrate animal.

Tarduno led an expedition into the Canadian Arctic in 2006 to study ancient aspect of Earth's magnetic field. Knowing the barren location was rich in fossils, they kept an eye out.

The team found the fossil of a tropical, freshwater, Asian turtle. Tarduno's knowledge of Earth's crust allowed him to determine the fossil did not get moved their by shifts in the crust known as tectonic activity. The turtle died and remained where it was found. It has been named the aurora turtle.

That raised a question: How could a freshwater turtle navigate a salty ocean, which existed at the region back then?

Tarduno and colleagues think the Arctic Ocean was more separated from the rest of the world's oceans at that time, reducing circulation. Numerous rivers from the adjacent continents would have poured fresh water into the sea. Since fresh water is lighter than saltwater, Tarduno thinks it may have rested on top, allowing a freshwater animal such as the aurora turtle to migrate with relative ease.

Similar changes may be occuring in parts of the oceans today. A study in 2005 found that since the late 1960s, much of the North Atlantic Ocean has become less salty, in part due to increases in fresh water runoff induced by global warming, scientists say.

The fossil was found atop basalt, a rock associated with lava flows. That offers a clue as to what might have warmed the climate 90 million years ago.

"We found this turtle right on top of the last flood basalts-a large stretch of lava from a series of giant volcanic eruptions," says Tarduno. "That leads us to believe that the warming may have been caused by volcanoes pumping tremendous amounts of carbon dioxide into the Earth's atmosphere. There's evidence that this volcanic activity happened all around the planet-not just the Arctic. If it all happened on a short enough timescale, it could cause a super-greenhouse effect."

TAGGED: EVOLUTION, PALEONTOLOGY


RELATED CONTENT

The living fossils of brain evolution

- - PhysOrg.com 2 Comments

(Phys.org) -- In the course of its evolution, the architecture of the mouse brain may have barely changed. Similar to the tiny ancestors of modern mammals that lived about 80 million years ago, nerve cells in the mouse visual cortex are densely packed in a small area of ​​the brain. However, during the subsequent evolution of larger brains the architecture of the cerebral cortex was radically restructured. This is the conclusion of an international team of researchers led by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, the University of Göttingen and the Bernstein Center Göttingen. The brains of larger mammals, such as humans, however, have a completely different structure to those of mice. Processes of self-organisation led to the emergence of modules in which neurons conjointly are responsible for specific tasks.

Human Evolution Isn't What It Used to Be

Matt Ridley - Wall Street Journal... 9 Comments

Recent analyses of the human genome reveal a huge number of rare—and therefore probably fairly new—mutations.

The Descent of Edward Wilson

Richard Dawkins - Prospect 34 Comments

Richard Dawkins's review of The Social Conquest of Earth, by Edward O Wilson (WW Norton, £18.99, May)

Ancient walking mystery deepens

Helen Briggs - BBC News - Science &... 7 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.

MORE

MORE BY LIVESCIENCE.COM, YAHOO

MORE

Comments

Comment RSS Feed

Please sign in or register to comment