This is the oldest embryo ever discovered on Earth, found in Uruguay and Brazil. It is a baby mesosaur, a group of small aquatic reptiles from the early Permian. According to the researchers, it's the earliest known case of viviparity.
The study—published in the journal Historic Biology by Graciela PiƱeiroa, Jorge Ferigolob, Melitta Meneghelc and Michel Laurind, from France's National Center for Research—is very important. Until now, scientists didn't have such an early record of viviparity, which is key to understand the evolution of vertebrates in our planet.
The unborn baby fossil—partially articulated and well-preserved—was discovered inside their mother and it had no recognizable eggshell. This discovery demonstrates that, instead of laying eggs in which the animals develop from the embryo stage, the embryo actually grew up inside the body of the mesosaur mother, eventually leading to live birth.
Mesosaurus were small alligator-like creatures that could go as long as 6.6 feet (2 metres) in length and probably fed on crustaceans. They lived in the early Permian period, the last of the Paleozoic Era, 299 to 270 million years ago. More here.
6 comments:
This is actually pretty damn amzing, thanks for sharing this man.
Jurassic Park, here we go! I've always known that the day of the ultimate entertainment park will come! :-D
LOL, it's amazing!
After all this time still intact. Wow.
Interesting find, this is amazing how its still intact.
Thinking the same thing. Out of all the prehistoric reptiles to be viviparous, I'm surprised it was mesosaurus.
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