Apr 28, 2024, 09:39 AM

News:

Proudly established in 2010, still going!


[Science] 90 million-year-old fossil shows how snakes lost their legs

Started by lioneatszebra, Nov 29, 2015, 06:45 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

lioneatszebra

90 million-year-old fossil shows how snakes lost their legs
from India TV News

Snakes lost their limbs when their ancestors evolved to wriggle through burrows, and not in order to live in the sea, according to a new analysis of a 90 million-year-old reptile fossil skull.

Comparisons between CT scans of the fossil and modern reptiles indicate that snakes lost their legs when their ancestors evolved to live and hunt in burrows, which many snakes still do today.

The findings from University of Edinburgh in the U.K. show that snakes did not lose their limbs in order to live in the sea, as was previously suggested.

Scientists used CT scans to examine the bony inner ear of Dinilysia patagonica, a 2-metre long reptile closely linked to modern snakes.

These bony canals and cavities, like those in the ears of modern burrowing snakes, controlled its hearing and balance.

They built 3D virtual models to compare the inner ears of the fossils with those of modern lizards and snakes. Researchers found a distinctive structure within the inner ear of animals that actively burrow, which may help them detect prey and predators.

This shape was not present in modern snakes that live in water or above ground.
brb, living offline