FOSSILS,
Rare Fossilized Shark...follow up, The great white shark may have awesome jaws but they are nothing compared with those of megalodon
05/08/08 14:42 Filed in: Science
This is a follow up
story from our fossilized shark....
Ancient shark had colossal bite
By Jennifer Carpenter
Science reporter, BBC News
The great white shark may have awesome jaws but they are nothing compared with those of megalodon, its gigantic, whale-eating ancestor.
A new study of the extinct creature's skull shows it had an almighty bite, making the prehistoric fish one of the most fearsome predators of all time.
All the more remarkable, scientists say, because the crushing force came from jaws made of cartilage, not bone.
The researchers report their skull work in the Journal of Zoology.
The megalodon super-shark swam in the oceans more than a million-and-a-half years ago.
It grew up to 16m (52ft) in length and weighed in at 100 tonnes - 30 times heavier than the largest great white - and must have been one of the most formidable carnivores to have existed...read more and the photos @
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7540835.stm
Ancient shark had colossal bite
By Jennifer Carpenter
Science reporter, BBC News
The great white shark may have awesome jaws but they are nothing compared with those of megalodon, its gigantic, whale-eating ancestor.
A new study of the extinct creature's skull shows it had an almighty bite, making the prehistoric fish one of the most fearsome predators of all time.
All the more remarkable, scientists say, because the crushing force came from jaws made of cartilage, not bone.
The researchers report their skull work in the Journal of Zoology.
The megalodon super-shark swam in the oceans more than a million-and-a-half years ago.
It grew up to 16m (52ft) in length and weighed in at 100 tonnes - 30 times heavier than the largest great white - and must have been one of the most formidable carnivores to have existed...read more and the photos @
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7540835.stm
Fossilized rare Shark found from the Jurassic period some 240 million years ago, this is the first complete fossil of a shark...
01/08/08 19:41 Filed in: Science
| Breaking
News
THE
first complete fossil of an ancient British shark was
unveiled today by the Natural History
Museum.
The perfectly preserved three foot long relic of a Wodnika will help palaeontologists gain a much clearer view on how the prehistoric British shark once lived.
Even its internal cartilage skeleton has survived for 240 million years before being discovered in Durham read more and see the photo click this link
The perfectly preserved three foot long relic of a Wodnika will help palaeontologists gain a much clearer view on how the prehistoric British shark once lived.
Even its internal cartilage skeleton has survived for 240 million years before being discovered in Durham read more and see the photo click this link
Human Fossils in PALAU MICRONESIA discoverd...an amazing find... recently screened on National Geographic TV...

© Gunther Deichmann - in the Dawn of Time
Palau Micronesia, for more on Palau click on
the image or the link below:
http://www.palautours.com/
3,000 year old small body humans
in Palau, Micronesia
Watching National Geographic on TV the other
day I was very fascinated by this amazing story,
only to read about it later on the Net again.
See below some excerpts from this truly
fascinating story.
For all the details and photos see the
link below the article.

© Gunther Deichmann - the Rock Islands of Palau Micronesia,
for more on Palau click on the image or the link below:
http://www.palautours.com/
PLoS One completely surprised me today by releasing this paper,
“Small-Bodied Humans from Palau, Micronesia.”
The research comes from South African and American
researchers, and the paper was edited by John Hawks,
who apparently can really keep a secret it seems. I had
no idea about this study and find it a really remarkable
find since fossils of another small bodied human, Homo
floresiensis, were found about 1,000 miles south of
these new findings.
So how were these bones found? Lead author, Lee Berger, writes to National Geographic
News that he was kayaking around rocky islands about 370 miles east of the Philippines,
when he found the bones in a pair of caves in 2006.
Crazy story! I wish I would find something like that while vacationing.
He reports that the, “the [Ucheliungs and Omedokel] caves were littered with bones that had
been dislodged by waves and piled like driftwood. Others had remained buried deep in the
sandy floor, and more, including several skulls, were cemented to the cave walls.”
http://anthropology.net/2008/03/10/3000-year-old-
small-body-humans-in-palau-micronesia/







