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Walking Tall In The Permian


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Posted

"A newly published analysis of the bones of Bunostegos akokanensis, a 260-million-year-old pre-reptile, finds that it likely stood upright on all-fours, like a cow or a hippo, making it the earliest known creature to do so."

That this is an energy efficient posture for locomotion in an environment of scant resources is cited in the article, but I also think that efficient respiration while moving was a factor in the several independent instances of the evolution of this posture.

LINK

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

Posted

Neat article.

Thanks for posting the link, Chas.

Regards,

    Tim    -  VETERAN SHALE SPLITTER

 

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Posted

What is a pre-reptile?

Thinking that it is an amphibian, and quite confused,

Brent Ashcraft

ashcraft, brent allen

Posted

What is a pre-reptile?

Thinking that it is an amphibian, and quite confused,

Brent Ashcraft

They are not quite either, and do not fit neatly into our pigeonholes (which were constructed before much was known about vertebrates from that distant era.

LINK

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

Posted

With a weird knobbly face and looking like a cross between a lizard and a hippo, this pre-reptile is now thought to be the earliest known animal to have walked upright on all fours. Know as Bunostegos akokanensis, it lived about 260-million-years ago, plodding around what is now the African country of Niger. Belonging to a group of animals called pareiasaurs, some argue that they eventually gave rise to turtles, though this is debated.


“A lot of the animals that lived around the [same] time had a similar upright or semi-upright hind limb posture, but what's interesting and special about Bunostegos is the forelimb,”explains Morgan Turner, who co-authored the paper published in The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. “The elements and features within the forelimb bones won't allow a sprawling posture. That is unique.”


It was previously thought that at the time Bunostegos was stomping around Pangea, the supercontinent that split up to form the continents we know today, all pareiasaurs moved with a “sprawling” gait. This is when the animal’s limbs stick out from the side of the body and then slant down to hit the floor, as seen in modern-day lizards and salamanders. It is the most primitive form of locomotion on land, occurring before animals evolved a fully erect stance.


Now, it appears that transition happened earlier than previously thought. Originally discovered in 2003, the fossils of Bunostegos caught the eye of paleontologists at Brown University. When looking at the forearms of several individuals, and the joints between the bones, it became more and more apparent to Turner that the animals’ limbs must have been positioned directly below the body.


Ja9YwwE.jpg


The shoulder joint (1), humerus (2), knee-like elbow joint (3), and a longer lower arm (4) together make the case that Bunostegos stood with its legs under its body. Morgan Turner/Brown University


The shoulder joint is at such an angle that it would have been physically impossible for the humerus, or upper arm bone, to have stuck out sideways. In addition to this, while the humerus of most sprawling animals is twisted – to allow the lower arm and foot to reach the floor – this is not seen in the bones of Bunostegos, indicating that it was not positioned in the same way. And the evidence doesn’t end there.


The elbow joint in most sprawling pareiasaurs is incredibly flexible, but Turner did not find that to be the case in Bunostegos. Instead, the joint was a lot more similar to our knee joints, only allowing for a forward and backwards motion of the lower arm and foot. Finally, confirming the conclusion in Turner's opinion were the relative lengths of the upper and lower arm, with the latter being longer than the former, as is common in most non-sprawling animals.


“Posture, from sprawling to upright, is not black or white, but instead is a gradient of forms,”says Turner. “There are many complexities about the evolution of posture and locomotion we are working to better understand every day. The anatomy of Bunostegos is unexpected, illuminating, and tells us we still have much to learn.”


Because of this gradient, Turner expects there were probably other pareiasaurs living at the time with a similar gait to Bunostegos, but are yet to be found.


  • I found this Informative 1

" We're all puppets, I'm just a puppet who can see the strings. "

Posted

Strong upright gate may have been why gorgonopsids appear so modern, in order to hunt them successfully.

Brent Ashcraft

ashcraft, brent allen

Posted

Very interesting, I had never heard of 'pre-reptiles.'

-Lyall

Posted

I once heard the term mammal like reptiles in reference to Permian taxon that did not survive or at least were decimated by the pt mass extinction. The implication being that the reptilian, with a capital r, creatures that did survive gave rise to the dinosaurs which effectively marginalized mammalian developement at least until the end Cretaceous mass extinction. I wonder how/where Bunostegos fits into the puzzle. Remarkable!!!

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