A jaw full of ancestral reality from Latvia and Estonia could fill a vital gap in the history of life on earth.
Published:
17 April 2000 y., Monday
The discovery of two lower jaw fragments from a 1.3 meter crocodilelike creature that lived 370 million years ago was announced last week by Dr. Pers Ahlberg from the Natural History Museum of London and could be the missing link that reveals how our ancestors paddled out of swampy shallows to live on land.
Ahlberg, together with Baltic researchers Dr. Ervins Luksevics from the Natural History Museum of Latvia in Riga and Dr.Elga Kurik from Tallinn`s Geological Institute, have affectionately named the creature "Livonia multidentato" for now because of its unprecedented five rows of lower teeth.
The ancient land of Livonia, where the specimens were unearthed from sandstone deposits left over from a worldwide climate shift, included central Latvia and southern Estonia."I was very very surprised by the discovery," said Luksevics. "The fossil has been in a drawer in our museum for about 11 years. It was originally found in 1964 by Teodors Kams, a private collector, whose collection was donated to the museum upon his death."
Ahlberg discovered a second jawbone fragment from Estonia at the Estonian Geological Institute, where it had been stowed away unrecognized for nearly 50 years.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A powerful version of ecstasy produced in Poland is thought to have been behind the deaths of three people here and at least 20 elsewhere in Europe, police said Wednesday.
more »
Bill Gates gave almost $1.5 billion last year to fight global health threats, including AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.
more »
Many anguished Brazilian women want to reverse procedure
more »
Although US physicians are enthusiastic users of the Web, most are reluctant to practice medicine online.
more »
Government leaflet urges kids to reduce exposure
more »
‘Job well done,’ Alpha’s commander tells Endeavour’s crew
more »
Researchers Press to Understand Mysterious Phenomenon
more »
Score one for exasperated women: New research suggests men really do listen with just half their brains.
more »
The nuclear power plant in Temelin, southern Bohemia, which has been strongly criticized by neighboring Austria and activists from some other countries as "atomic scrap" is much safer than believed originally.
more »
The continent is swept by a case of mad-cow dread
more »