Skip to main content

Ancient animal footprints found in quarry

World Cement,


Footprints belonging to ancient four-legged animals have been discovered in a quarry in southeast Poland. Several tracks have been identified in the Zachelmie Quarry in the Holy Cross Mountains, documenting the existence of unknown tetrapods (animals with backbones and four limbs) that lived on earth about 397 million years ago.

Scientists have said that the fossil tracks are so detailed that even the impressions left by the animals' toes are visible. Experts say that the find means that land vertebrates appeared millions of years earlier than previously supposed.

It is suspected that the animals were crocodile-like in appearance and lived an amphibian-like existence and would have lived in a tropical muddy shoreline in the Middle Devonian Period of Earth history. The prints range in size and detail and some suggest that the animals could have been up to 8 ft. (2.4 m) long and 10 in. (26 m) wide.

According to an expert, the discovery will change beliefs about the emergence of vertebrates on land. For example, an organism called Tikaalik roseae is an animal that had features intermediate between fish and tetrapods. However, the Tiktaalik lived about 375 million years ago and although there are slightly older transition fossils, the Zachelmie Quarry tetrapods interfere with the simple timeline. This discovery pushes back the divergence between fish and the four-legged vertebrates by about 18 million years. The tracks are also ten million years older than the oldest known fossils of lobe-finned fishes called elpistostegids, which are widely considered to be transitional forms between fish and tetrapods.

Read the article online at: https://www.worldcement.com/europe-cis/08012010/ancient_animal_footprints_found_in_quarry/

You might also like

World Cement podcast

The World Cement Podcast

In this special joint episode of the World Cement Podcast, and Cementing Europe’s future, the podcast of CEMBUREAU, David Bizley and Koen Coppenholle take a deep dive into the Clean Industrial Deal and a discussion of what it means for the European cement industry.

Listen for free today at www.worldcement.com/podcasts or subscribe and review on your favourite podcast app.

Apple Podcasts  Spotify Podcasts  YouTube

 

Shaping The Future Through Shredding

Gary Moore, UNTHA Shredding Technology GmbH, highlights the global momentum behind alternative fuels and the role of advanced shredding in shaping cement’s low-carbon future.

 
 

Embed article link: (copy the HTML code below):