IndiaVision RSS Feed    Browse IndiaVision on Mobile    Subscribe to me on FriendFeed    Follow us on Twitter    Follow us on Facebook
News | Videos | Mobile | Jobs | Blog | Yellow Pages | Games | Jokes | Chat | e-Cards | Astrology | Articles | Recipes | Send Gifts
IndiaVision - An Informative Site on India
IndiaVision NEWS
Today : Sunday - May 27, 2012, 11:47am (GMT+5.5)
All News  
Top News
National News
International News
Business News
Sports News
   » Cricket
   » Football
Entertainment News
Sci - Tech
Politics News
Health & Fitness
Education
Travel
Lifestyle
Gulf News
Featured
 
::| Latest News
News in Pictures

US President Barack Obama, speaking for the first time about allegations that Secret Service agents hired prostitutes, said on Sunday that "of course I'll be angry" if those accusations are proven true by an investigation.

Sci - Tech
 

Fossil footprints of world’s oldest elephant herd found

Friday - Feb 24, 2012, 04:10am (GMT+5.5)
[+] Text [-]

Washington -  Scientists have discovered some ancient footprints in the Arabian Desert dating back to over seven million years, which they believe could be the world’s oldest elephant tracks.

These prehistoric footsteps, likely the work of some 13 four-tusked elephant ancestors, are the earliest direct evidence of how the ancestors of modern elephants interacted socially, and the oldest evidence of an elephant herd.

“Basically, this is fossilized behavior,” the Huffington Post quoted researcher Faysal Bibi, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Museum for Natural History in Berlin, as saying.

“This is an absolutely unique site, a really rare opportunity in the fossil record that lets you see animal behavior in a way you couldn’t otherwise do with bones or teeth,” stated Bibi.

The site, known as Mleisa 1, is in the United Arab Emirates. The region then was home to a great diversity of animals, including elephants, hippopotamuses, antelopes, giraffes, pigs, monkeys, rodents, small and large carnivores, ostriches, turtles, crocodiles and fish.

These were sustained by a very large river flowing slowly through the area, along which flourished vegetation, including large trees. The animals resembled those from Africa during the same time, though there are also similarities with Asian and European species of that period.

Fossil trackways in the region have been long known to locals, and were taken to be the prints of dinosaurs or giants of ancient myth. It was not until January 2011, when researchers mapped the area from the air for the first time, “that we realized what we had and how we could go about studying it,” Bibi said.

The footprints cover an area of 12.3 acres (5 hectares). This is about equal to nine U.S. football fields, seven soccer fields, or the base of the Great Pyramid of Giza.

The researchers noted that while these prehistoric titans were proboscideans like modern elephants, they likely looked quite different. Of the three kinds of fossil proboscidean species in the area at that time, the one that most likely made the trackways was Stegotetrabelodon syrticus, the earliest known member of the elephant family, “which carried tusks in both its upper and lower jaws,” Bibi told LiveScience.

Analysis of the footsteps suggests they belonged to a herd of at least 13 elephants of different sizes and ages that walked through mud, leaving behind tracks that hardened, were buried, and then re-exposed by erosion.

The researchers also discovered tracks from a solitary male traveling in a different direction from the herd. These suggest the extinct giants divided into solitary and social groups, just as elephants do today. Also, these ancient pachyderms might have structured themselves along lines of sex just as their modern relatives do, with the males leaving the herd to live alone.

The scientists detail their findings online in the journal Biology Letters.



|

Rating (Votes: )   

blog comments powered by Disqus

Other Articles:
New mutation behind breast cancer identified (24th Feb, 2012)
New amphibians family found in northeast India (24th Feb, 2012)
Human enzyme lengthens mouse life (24th Feb, 2012)
Loose cable may have caused neutrinos to defy Einstein theory (24th Feb, 2012)
Soon, eat your bottles once you’ve drunk what’s inside (24th Feb, 2012)
Now, vest that can diagnose heart attacks as soon as they happen (23rd Feb, 2012)
New skin cancer drug ‘almost doubles survival’ (23rd Feb, 2012)
Doubts cast over theory of men’s ‘rotting’ Y chromosome (23rd Feb, 2012)
Deepest terrestrial animal found in Krubera-Voronja cave (23rd Feb, 2012)
Earth’s ‘rhythmic throbbing’ may cause extinctions every 60 million yrs (23rd Feb, 2012)
Japan builder plans to build space elevator (23rd Feb, 2012)
Samsung's Galaxy S2 sales top 20 mn units (23rd Feb, 2012)
Facebook’s photo guidelines say no to nipples but give nod to ‘gore’ (23rd Feb, 2012)
Why urban birds sing louder than woodland counterparts (23rd Feb, 2012)
General motivation centre in brain identified (23rd Feb, 2012)
Google's digital glasses to be revealed soon (23rd Feb, 2012)
Novel compounds for treating muscular dystrophy created (23rd Feb, 2012)
Soon, light activated ‘off-switch’ for pain (23rd Feb, 2012)
Likely new trigger for epidemic of metabolic syndrome discovered (23rd Feb, 2012)
Therapy to eradicate malaria comes closer to reality (23rd Feb, 2012)
Heart beats to rhythm of body clock (23rd Feb, 2012)
Tiny medical device can propel itself through bloodstream (23rd Feb, 2012)
Now, injectable gel that could repair tissue damaged by heart attack (23rd Feb, 2012)
Online video game boosts cognitive functioning in older adults (23rd Feb, 2012)
Fear of spiders makes people overestimate their size (23rd Feb, 2012)





Visit IndiaVision On Your Mobile
Buy Domain Names Online
Get Free Mail
Free Mail
Login | Sign Up
Download IndiaVision Free Toolbar
FireFox Safari Internet Explorer
 
Contact Us | Advertise with Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Terms of Use
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...