Wednesday, September 05, 2007

How could a fish bury itself in 1,325 meters of earth

If it had only 6,000 years to do it in?

They went drilling for oil in northern Alberta and instead dug up a one-of-a-kind, 96-million-year-old fossilized fish small enough to fit in your palm, but big enough to yield clues on how sea critters migrated in the age of tyrannosaurus rex.

But to fish paleontologist Alison Murray, the Tycheroichthys dunvenganensis is also a big question mark.

"It's complete fossil, which means it must have been killed and buried very, very quickly," said Murray, who now researches at the University of Alberta.

"It wasn't scavenged or broken apart in wave action. It must have been some sort of sudden event that killed it and trapped it in mud."

But based on the biology of its living relatives, the herring family, it is not the type of fish to have swum in muddy waters, she said.

"So I'm not sure what it was doing there. He is an anomaly."

It's a member of the extinct fish family Paraclupeidae. While other members of this family have been found in Lebanon, Morocco and Brazil, the Alberta find is a new genus entirely.

The fossil, written up recently in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, was actually unearthed two decades ago south of Grande Prairie in a core sample taken 1,325 metres below the surface by now-defunct Cequel Energy Inc.

[snip]

Murray said it was swimming in a monster seaway that had cleaved what is now North America in two in the late Cretaceous period.

She said the find is further evidence of a direct water link between North America through Great Britain to the Mediterranean Sea, but also gives credence to the theory of a direct water link from the Mediterranean through what is now Hudson Bay.

2 comments:

ed said...

This new discovery may also help to dispel lingering beliefs that the Earth is carried on the back of a giant turtle. But I know that a significant percentage of the populace will still hold firmly to such ideas, along with Creationism, Intelligent Design, etc., no matter what evidence surfaces.

ellroon said...

Damn. Now I'll never find out exactly what the giant turtle was walking on and what he ate...

And I mentioned on some other thread, the fundamentalist deals with any scientific proof as a test from God, to see if your faith is strong enough.