350mn-yr-old, 4-legged amphibian’s burrow found in Pennsylvania
November 10th, 2010 - 12:51 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Nov 10 (ANI): Researchers have stumbled upon the fossil remains of a burrow belonging to an amphibian that lived 350 million years ago in Pennsylvania.
The borrow is now filled with sediments which have turned to stone. But it retains the gently funnel-shaped opening which leads to a downward dropping tunnel, which rises again to the main borrow. There are also features on the outside of the burrow that make a strong case for it having once been open to the surface, near a river.
Ed Simpson, a palaeontologist at Kutztown University in Pennsylvania, came up with two basic lines of reasoning that the burrow was either formed by water wind or other physical processes, or it was formed by an organism, reports the Discovery News.
The only thing that comes close is a pothole, which is formed in a river by rocks, but the hole was too deep and the upward arc of the tunnel can’t be easily explained as a pothole.
Another possibility is that a buried log could have rotted away, said geologist David Loope of the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. But doesn’t seem likely to have produced this structure either, he said.
A primitive burrow seems far more feasible, Loope agreed. What’s more, there are probably lots more like it in sedimentary rocks all over the world, if only people were looking for them.
“If you look at the (later) Permian fossils they actually make corkscrew burrows,” said Simpson.
These perhaps allowed their inhabitants to fight off intruders by turning corners all the way down.
Regarding the animal that dug the burrow, “it was a tetrapod definitely,” said Simpson, referring to early reptile or amphibian with four legs, a spine and a tail — as opposed to some sort of giant worm or other invertebrate. The best bet was that it was an amphibian, because of the age, he said.
The find appears in the journal Palaeo. (ANI)
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Tags: amphibian, best bet, burrow, burrows, corkscrew, discovery news, ed simpson, geologist, giant worm, loope, palaeo, palaeontologist, permian fossils, physical processes, pothole, sedimentary rocks, tetrapod, turning corners, university of nebraska, university of nebraska in lincoln