Science
Related: About this forumGiant Terror Birds Were Apex Predators of Eocene-Period Antarctica
Mar 25, 2024 by Enrico de Lazaro
Paleontologists have unearthed two fossilized phalanges of an ancient carnivorous bird on Seymour Island, Antarctica.
Paleoenvironmental reconstruction of the Early Eocene continental communities of Seymour Island: a large cariamiform bird hunting a medium-sized ungulate and staring at Notiolofos regueroi, a couple of marsupials on a tree, Antarctoboenus carlinii flying on the sky, and a flightless Ratites in the back. Image credit: Carolina Acosta Hospitaleche & Washington Jones, doi: 10.26879/1340.
The ancient bird fossils were found in the La Meseta Formation on Seymour Island in West Antarctica.
These phalanges belonged to a large giant predator, estimated to have had a body mass of around 100 kg, said Dr. Carolina Acosta Hospitaleche from the Universidad Nacional de La Plata and Dr. Washington Jones from the Uruguays Museo Nacional de Historia Natural.
The specimens are approximately 50 million years old (Early Eocene epoch).
They belong to a type of phorusrhacid (commonly known as terror birds), an extinct family within the order Cariamiformes.
Cariamiformes is an order of mainly terrestrial birds that exhibits a significant past diversification but only two species are living today in South America, the paleontologists said.
Despite the rich fossil record, the phylogenetic and biogeographic relationships within this order remain poorly understood.
More:
https://www.sci.news/paleontology/antarctic-terror-birds-12791.html
Ocelot II
(120,782 posts)Probatim
(3,010 posts)Dear_Prudence
(823 posts)The moa flightless bird was 12 feet tall and 500 pounds. People arrived in New Zealand around 1300 and the previously common moa became extinct within 100 years. I am opposed to using fossil dna to reconstitute mammoths because habitat is dwindling and we should conserve/protect species with us now; it is just wrong. But, kicking ethics aside, I really really want them to bring back the moa.