Welcome back! It’s this time of year again where I go down
the annual Paleofest Symposium, held every March at the Burpee Museum in
Rockford Illinois. There’s always new discoveries, new experiences, and a lot
of great talks about paleontology research. For further details, I once again
recommend our MC Scott Williams, for tweets check out Dr. Thomas Holtz’s
twitter, and for images ask Todd Johnson. Once again there’s no particular
theme, but once again younger researchers and women researchers take the
foreground on a wide variety of topics.
The first talk was by Aaron Van der Reest of the University
of Alberta, on preserved dinosaur tissue. It was interesting to learn that not
only do have that Tyrannosaurus’ bone marrow but earlier formations. An
Ornithomimus was found not only with feathers (symmetrical but without
barbules), but the keratin in the feathers survived in the fossil. The Foremost, Dinosaur Park, Brazeau and
Wapiti Formation were all examined. Dinosaur Park has Gorgosaurus and
Laterivenatrix fossils with blood cells but without osteocytes (bone cells).
The Brazeau formation does have a lot of osteocytes, while the Wapiti has a
small amount but they are still present.
Frustratingly, we have yet to find out why these tissues preserve and
why not in other geological layers. Hopefully further research will reveal why.
This was followed by a great talk by Denise Su from the
Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Her
studies focused on hominin paleoecology, a subject very close to me and my
academic background. Laetoli, Tanzania
is known for its footprints of Australopithecus, but the paleoecology was not
yet studied. There is a mixed fauna of browsers and grazers, but grass species
and bovid species indicate a dry grassy habitat-rabbits outnumber rodents, and
the only aquatic animals are gastropods. This suggests a mosaic habitat of open
parkland with ponds and streams. The sites of Hadar (home of Lucy) and
Woranso-Mile not only have more Australopithecus remains and more species of
Australopithecus, but the fossils suggest a much wetter environment. These
sites, combined with microwear and carbon isotopes, suggest Australopithecus
was a flexible generalist that preferred soft fruits in wet environments.
Carrie Levitt-Bussian’s talk was on the Kaparowitz Formation
in Utah, and specifically the growth rates of the Chamosaurines found there.
Ectotherms today like reptiles grow slowly and continuously through their
lives, with adulthood slowing down the rate but never really stopping, while endotherms
like birds have cyclical, fast growth, and both are shown in bone histology. I can’t
reveal the details, but suffice to say we have a variety of different warm
blooded but very different bone growth patterns from different species.
Roy Plotnick’s talk
was very different. Instead of existing fossils, he predicted current patterns
of fauna and what the paleontologists millions of years from now would
find. He argued that humans would leave
more fossils than artifacts, let alone very fragile history. He noted that taphonomy bias such as the
difficulty of upland and forest environments in preserving fossils, and
estimated only 8% of all current species would be preserved. Using the mammal
populations in Michigan, he used statistics to show biomass: the majority is
humans, followed by livestock, then finally wildlife dominated by deer. Livestock
would be preserved as middens and trenches, humans in cemeteries, although both
environments would be vulnerable to later climate change that might interfere
with fossilization. It was chilling but thoughtful.
My favorite talk of the day was from Ashley Poust from the
University of California Berkley. His
talk was on Creodonts, a strange group of carnivorous mammals from 60-15
million years ago. Hypercarnivores
already existed in the Cretaceous, but as mammal prey got bigger, mammal
predators also increased in size (the phrase “Sea going murder factories” is used to apply to whales hilariously) . The
focus was primarily on the Hyenodonts, as Oxyaenids are more obscure, rare,
primitive and ill-defined. Hyeanodonts,
defined by 3 pairs of carnassials, ranging from weasel to rhinoceros size,
reaching their apex in the middle and late Eocene, are in turn divided into the
northern Hyeanodontidae and the African Hyainailuridae. In bone histology, we see
two forms of growth: fast and disordered, or ordered and slow. Looking at 18
femurs, Poust found that the growth beings fast, then slows, slower than modern
carnivores (but at the same rate as contemporary carnivorans), but in the same
pattern. However, the Hyainailurids have even slower growth.
A new possibility raises its head: African hyenodonts are not related to
the Hyeanodonts, but actually Afrotheres like Hyrax, Tenrecs, and Elephants!
The next talk was also about mammals-in this case metatherians.
Metatherians contain marsupials and their relatives, and existed in the
Cretaceous period. North American metatheres, represented by mostly tooth taxa,
went extinct in the K-Pg extinction, but their relationship with existing
metatheres is still a mystery. Alexandria Brannick of the University of Seattle
has recently found significant fossils however-excavating in Egg Mountain, a
late Cretaceous site that gives paleontologists a great look into dinosaur
behavior and environments in an upland environment, she has found significant
material of Alphadon, . This includes a complete skull, as well as unpublished
material that is suffice to say exciting. Brannick has concluded on these new
finds that North American metatheres like Alphadon from the middle to late
Cretaceous are actually closer to South American marsupials than contemporary
South American metatheres as well as the Sparassdonts, a group of metatheres
that evolved into large hypercarnivores during the Cenozoic.
The obligatory invertebrate talk was by James Lamsdell of West Virginia University, looking spiffy in a Ravenclaw scarf. He argued that
Eurypterids were model organisms, as they were well preserved and show very
interesting patterns of evolution. Eurypterids, also called sea scorpions, are
diverse (150 different species ranged in shape, ecology, and the size of a
toothpick to the size of an alligator), variable, and well-preserved, with a
robust and well-established phylogeny. They were the first arthropods with
large pincers and claws, which were generalized in immature stages and
specialized in maturity. They peaked in the Devonian, but the Devonian
extinction caused the marine species to die out, succeeded by unrelated
bottom-feeding freshwater groups in the Carboniferous: the tiny progenic
(possessing adult traits immediately) Adelophthalmids and the giant
neotenous (keeping juvenile traits in
adulthood) Mycteropoids. Eurypterids are
also an evolutionary transition-they have pseudotrachae like marine isopods,
transitioning from true gills to book lungs used by terrestrial
arthropods. There’s new material that
shows more revelations, but it’s unpublished.
The last talk was by Jade Simon of the University of
Toronto, about new Anzu material. This is such new material I am not permitted
to reveal exactly what she found in terms of new oviraptorid material from Hell
Creek. However, I did also learn about the differentiation between the clades
of Oviraptors. Oviraptors are divided into Oviraptorids from Asia, and
Caegnathids from both Asia and North America.
The difference is in their morphology and habitats: Oviraptorids are in
dry habitats, with deeper mandibles and short metatarsals, and are overall more
common, while Caegnathids have long flat mandibles, long metatarsals, are much
rarer, and are more associated with wetlands.
The diet remains unknown-both carnivore, herbivory, and omnivory have
been suggested. She revealed more, very exciting discoveries to boot, but they
are not yet published. Just get excited.
The next day started out with a look at the neglected
Chugwater fauna of Triassic Wyoming by David Lovelace of the University of
Wisconsin. The Late Triassic is
abundant, with sites in Mexico to Canada, from California to Virginia. And yet
the Chugwater basin remains the “Red bedded stepchild” of well studied
locations Arizona-New Mexico Chinle formation and Texas’ Dockum formation. The first fossils in Chugwater were
invertebrate ichnofossils, joined by other footprints from Rauisuchians naad
Rhynchosaurs. After 100 years of neglect, new finds reveal new phytosaur,
metoposaur, and Dicynodont material. Phytosaurs in particular include
well-preserved Palaeorhinus, which resembles basal animals. There are also mass
mortality beds of Koskinonodon, giant predatory amphibians-interestingly
enough, those at Chugwater are much smaller than the individuals
elsewhere. Finally, there are
burrows-for decades these burrows found in Triassic rock were assumed to be
tiny lungfish; however, these new finds reveal they were created by Triassic
caecilians, limbless amphibians inhabiting tropical, wet forests. Once again, there’s some revolutionary
finds, but I cannot disclose their identity at the moment.
The next talk is also about the late Triassic, in this case
the Dockum’s freshwater fish. Sarah Gibson of St Cloud University studies
Redfieldiform fish, a group of mysterious rayfinned fish of the Triassic
ranging from the Karoo of Africa to the Newark of the USA. These fish are
characterized by their short and spiky snouts, and in the Dockum the remains
are excellent. Found here are Cionicthys and Lasalicthys, also found in the
Chinle. Especially interesting however is Hemicalypterus, a spiky-snouted fish
that has armored ganoid scales in front and tiny regular scales in back. Most intriguing,
Hemicalpyterus has spork-shaped teeth: rounded with small points. No other fish
in the formation has those. However, a greater scope comparison reveals that
this tooth morphology is found in herbivorous fish: particularly those
specialized in scraping algae off rocks. The conclusion: Hemicalypterus is the
first herbivorous fish. The teeth, the morphology, and the armor arrangement is
parallel to catfish in convergent evolution.
This is a real revelation for me, and a fascinating discovery.
The next talk was the weakest of the weekend, but still had
some interesting ideas and potential for further research. Armita Manafzadeh of
Brown University studied locomotion using an X-ROMM, using X-rays to see the
skeletal elements of a moving animal.
Her particular issue was with Pterosaurs, commonly shown with splayed
hindlimbs. After examining bird and reptile leg mechanics and range of motion
on 3 axes, she scanned pterosaur hindlimbs and animated them in a computer
program. Her conclusion was ligaments present in living taxa would prevent the
hindlimbs. Her main mistake was using birds rather than bats, phylogeny rather
than actual morphology, a mistake she admitted, pointing out that phylogeny is
not guaranteed to explain biomechanics. She made three mistakes: first is not
talking with pterosaur experts, the second is not taking account of the flight
membrane that stretched across the animal’s limbs, and finally she did not take
into account actual pterosaur footprints that showed exactly how they
locomoted. Her criticism comes off as attacking a strawman of how scientists
actually think pterosaurs moved, and not providing any alternative model.
However, she did succeed in showing the potential for this technology to imply
the range of motion for animals, and she did make valid points that we need new
rules of biomechanics, more joint studies, and studying the mechanics of an
entire limb anatomy rather than just joints.
The next talk was excellent-Eva Hoffman of Harvard
University brought new discoveries to light on Kanyentatherium’s reproduction.
Hatchling synapsids are rare in the fossil record, so we don’t know their
litter size. Short-tailed Tenrecs, small
mammals from Madagascar, have litter sizes of 16, with one individual giving
birth to 32. So it was an amazing find
to discover hatchlings of the one of the last non-mammal synapsids. This genus
is Kayentatherium, a tritylodont cynodont that lived in the shadow of
Dilophosaurus and other dinosaurs. One individual was found with its clutch:
while the soft, uncalcified eggshells did not fossilize, at least 38 babies
were found. We don’t know if they had just hatched or died unhatched, but these
tiny fossils show that large litter sizes existed. Cynodont ontogeny is shown
as they have small postdentaries and brains compared to adults, but unlike
modern cynodonts (mammals), their heads are the same proportions and shapes as
adults, whereas their living relatives had rounder, proportionally larger
skulls. Hoffman has discovered an
inverse correlation-the larger the brain, the smaller the clutch, and
vice-versa.
Thomas Cullen, the new dinosaur expert at the Field Museum,
gave a talk about Sue. While the discoveries made during Sue’s renovation
remain unpublished, what I can repeat is his pitch for the new exhibit. I am a
docent for the Evolving Planet exhibit that Sue’s exhibit is attached to, and
it’s an excellent update; Sue is placed in context in both history and ecology.
The Gastralia and furcula have been finally added to the skeleton, and the
right leg repositioned to be anatomically correct. A light-and-sound
presentation shows the highlights of Sue and their pathologies as well as
Tyrannosaurus anatomy in general. Bone histology has been studied, but since
the revelations are unpublished, I cannot reveal them. I can only say they are
fascinating if you have any interest in bone histology.
The next two talks were about the palaeobotany of the Late
Cretaceous/Early Paleogene transition. The first was by Antoine Bercovici of
the Smithsonian Institution, who took floral inventory at the Marmoth site near
Bowman, North Dakota. Both pollen, wood, and leaf imprint fossils were all
studied and counted. At the Cretaceous layer, angiosperms, flowering plants,
dominate. Right above the iridium player is a spike in fern fossils, which is typical
for plant growth after a defoliating disaster like a volcanic eruption. The
most significant change is that out of over 100 species, only 3 survived.
Insect numbers correlate-all the specialized insect species go extinct. Likewise with birds-of all the dinosaurs,
only the toothless birds survived. The
biggest revelations are that no families of plants went extinct-only genera,
and that the Deccan eruptions’ impact seems to have been overstated: their
release of CO2 actually enriched the plant taxa in both number and diversity.
Regan Dunn, his counterpart at the Field Museum, did a
focused study on the canopy cover. What exactly killed all these plants would
be the earthquakes and shockwave of the impact itself, followed by a brief
superheat, then choking clouds of soot and dust as nuclear winter set in and
the temperature dropped 25 degrees Celsius, then acid rain as the toxic sulfur
combined with the water vaporized by the earlier heat. How to measure canopy cover? Dunn looked at
leaf area index which indicates how much of light reached the ground. The
higher up the leaf, the smaller it is in area, and vice-versa, creating two
subtypes of leaves on the same tree: sun leaves and shade leaves. Phytoliths
and cuticles were added to the material, using cell morphology and modern
analogies. However, the final data is
unpublished and cannot be divulged.
The last talk was again from Thomas Holtz of the University
of Maryland, on Dinosaur Integument. The first dinosaur scales were discovered
in 1851, and mummies of many lineages were found with fossil scale impressions.
However, there was always this suspicion that some dinosaurs were birdlike, and
might have had feathered. Ornitholestes was once pondered to have been
feathered in 1910, but this was ignored. In the 1970s when the Dinosaur
Renaissance began, paleoartists like Landry and Paul suspected that dinosaurs
had feathers. In 1996, the feathered
dinosaurs began to show up-Sinosauropteryx, a juvenile Scirimimus, Yutyrannus
of the theropods, then Tianyulong and Kulindadromeus in ornithischians. What
Holtz calls “the Great Enfluffening began”. And then came the question-which
dinosaurs had feathers and which didn’t? There are three phylogenies ordering
sauropods, theropods, and beaked dinosaurs, and they all are valid (the
saurichian-ornithiscian split seems to be the best-supported, but only
marginally). Another unfortunate problem
is that most environments don’t preserve feathers-we find Archaeopteryx with
feathers, but also Archaeopteryx without fossils.
Holtz then pointed out that most animals in real life have
multiple integruments-birds have naked skin, monofilaments, feathers, and
scales on the same skin. Scales even
vary on the same animal-crocodiles have fine scales, cracked skin on the mouth,
and osteoderms. Pterosaurs have been
found with “Fuzz”-filaments that can be classified as feathers, and some even
with multiple fibers growing from the same root. Body size SOUNDS like a sound idea, but we
have 2 ton Tyrannosaurs covered in fibers, and giant Deinocherius has a tail
vetebra that looks like it might have had supported plumes, wooly mammoths in
mammals, and even elephants today can be quite furry on occasion. Indeed, it’s
commonly assumed that giant sloths had fur, even though we haven’t found direct
evidence of it-could they have been scaly? His conclusion was a fascinating
one: it’s just as likely that Tyrannosaurus had feathers as it had filament
fuzz as it had scales, and they could have been in any combination. It’s a genuine mystery-and one that allows for
a lot of variation in paleoart.
So it was a great set of talks this year, and I’m looking
forward to the releases of more finds, more papers, and more paleofests!
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