. Earth Science News .
FLORA AND FAUNA
Remarkable Fossil Cave Shows How Ancient Marsupials Grew

Nimbadon lavarackorum skeleton.
by Staff Writers
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Jul 20, 2010
The discovery of a remarkable 15-million-year-old Australian fossil limestone cave packed with even older animal bones has revealed almost the entire life cycle of a large prehistoric marsupial, from suckling young in the pouch still cutting their milk teeth to elderly adults.

In an unprecedented find, a team of University of New South Wales [Sydney Australia] researchers in has unearthed from the cave floor hundreds of beautifully preserved fossils of the extinct browsing wombat-like marsupial Nimbadon lavarackorum, along with the remains of galloping kangaroos, primitive bandicoots, a fox-sized thylacine and forest bats.

By comparing the skulls of 26 different Nimbadon individuals that died in the cave at varying stages of life the team has been able to show that its babies developed in much the same way as marsupials today, probably being born after only a month's gestation and crawling to the mother's pouch to complete their early development.

Details of the find at a site known as AL90 in the famous Riversleigh World Heritage fossil field in Queensland are published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, by a team led by Dr Karen Black, of the UNSW School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences. The research was supported by the Xstrata Community Partnership Program North Queensland and the Australian Research Council.

"This is a fantastic and incredibly rare site," says Dr Black.

"The exceptional preservation of the fossils has allowed us to piece together the growth and development of Nimbadon from baby to adult. So far 26 skulls - ranging in age from suckling pouch young and juveniles right through to elderly adults - have been recovered, as well as associated skeletons.

"The animals appear to have plunged to their deaths through a vertical cave entrance that may have been obscured by vegetation and acted as a natural pit-fall trap. These animals - including mothers with pouch young - either unwittingly fell to their deaths or survived the fall only to be entombed and unable to escape.

"The ceiling and walls of the cave were eroded away millions of years ago, but the floor of the cave remains at ground level. We have literally only scratched its surface, with thousands more bones evident at deeper levels in the deposit.'

The site is also scientifically important because it documents a critical time in the evolution of Australia's flora and fauna when lush greenhouse conditions were giving way to a long, slow drying out that fundamentally reshaped the continent's cargo of life as rainforests retreated.

Dr Black notes that the Nimbadon skulls also reveal that early in life, the emphasis of its growth was on the development of bones at the front of the face, to help the baby to suckle from its mother. As it grew older and its diet changed to eating leaves, the rest of the skull developed and grew quite massive by way of a series of bony chambers surrounding the brain.

Team member Professor Mike Archer says: "Yet we found that its brain was quite small and stopped growing relatively early in its life. We think it needed a large surface area of skull to provide attachments for all the muscle power it required to chew large quantities of leaves, so its skull features empty areas, or sinus cavities. Roughly translated, this may be the first demonstration of how a growing mammal 'pays' for the need to eat more greens - by becoming an 'airhead'.

"The abundance of Nimbadon fossils also suggests that they travelled in family groups or perhaps even larger gatherings: it's possible that this also reflects the beginning of mob behaviour in herbivorous marsupials, such as we see today in grey kangaroos."



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
University of New South Wales
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


FLORA AND FAUNA
UN food agency offers advice to fend off hippos, baboons
Rome (AFP) July 19, 2010
Relief is in sight for African farmers struggling to fend off ravenous elephants and other wildlife looking for a free lunch in their fields, the UN food agency said Monday. "To the family concerned, the loss of a patch of maize to raiding elephants can mean the loss of their food supply for a year, the difference between self-sufficiency and being destitute," the Food and Agriculture Organi ... read more







FLORA AND FAUNA
Voodoo rite draws Haitian faithful praying for comfort

27 missing after bus plunges off road in southwest China

The Life-Saving Capabilities Of Storm Shelters

World Bank-managed Haiti aid fund only 20 percent full

FLORA AND FAUNA
Eurofighter partners say to develop latest generation radar

'Smart' metal could replace refrigerants

Australian laser system to track space junk

Amazon says Kindle sales leapfrog hardback sales

FLORA AND FAUNA
Stormwater Model To Inform Regulators On Future Development Projects

Aquatic Dead Zones

Findings Overturn Old Theory Of Phytoplankton Growth

Turkey, Turkish Cypriots sign water pipeline deal

FLORA AND FAUNA
Satellite giving scientists 'ice' insights

Himalayan ice shrivels in global warming: exhibit

Footloose Glaciers Crack Up

Arctic Climate May Be More Sensitive To Warming Than Thought

FLORA AND FAUNA
Hospitals urge antiobiotic-free meat

Thailand to unleash swarm of wasps on crop pest

AgBank shares to start trading in Hong Kong

China seizes eight tonnes of endangered pangolins

FLORA AND FAUNA
Death toll from typhoon rises to 76 in Philippines

Singapore to step up anti-flood measures after deluge

Flash floods stain Singapore's reputation as urban paradise

146 dead in China rainstorms and floods: state media

FLORA AND FAUNA
Kenya goes hi-tech to curb election fraud

Northrop Grumman Wins African Training Contract

G. Bissau president warns army top brass, drug traffickers

Religious intolerance threatens Nigerian democracy: Jonathan

FLORA AND FAUNA
The Friend Of My Enemy Is My Enemy

The Protective Brain Hypothesis Is Confirmed

Scientists study brain's 'body map'

The Battle For News Supremacy


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement