Monday, October 10, 2011

Re: [Geology2] Did a sea monster make an artwork… out of bones?



Wow..this is fascinating. But why not? Elephants and apes paint. Perhaps this creature had a yen for self expression. lol.. This must have been a huge octopus. Allison

From: Lin Kerns <linkerns@gmail.com>
To: Geology2 <geology2@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Monday, October 10, 2011 10:52 AM
Subject: [Geology2] Did a sea monster make an artwork… out of bones?
 

Did a sea monster make an artwork… out of bones?
Oct. 10, 2011
Courtesy of the Geological Society of America
and World Science staff
In one of the strang­est the­o­ries to find its way out of the staid world of pa­le­on­tol­ogy in a long time, re­search­ers claim a gi­gantic pre­his­tor­ic oc­to­pus may have made a jigsaw-puz­zle-like art­work out of its vic­tims' bones.

As if that weren't enough to raise eye­brows, there is more. Ac­cord­ing to the the­o­ry, the vic­tims were not just an­y­one, but gi­ant sea mon­sters in their own right—a trib­ute to the truly stag­ger­ing size of the sticky as­sail­ant.

Fossilized shon­i­saur ver­te­brae at Ber­lin-Ich­thy­o­saur State Park in Ne­va­da. (Cour­te­sy Mark Mc­Me­na­min)
Had enough? But there is even more. The art­work was, it would seem, not just any old doo­dle, but a sort of Tri­as­sic self-portrait.

A husband-and-wife re­search team is pre­sent­ing the pro­pos­al to ex­plain the neat, al­most sys­tem­at­ic ar­range­ment of bones in a sea rep­tile fos­sil that has puz­zled sci­en­tists for over half a cen­tu­ry. 

"We're ready" for the skep­ti­cal ques­tion­ing to beg­in, said ge­ol­o­gist and pa­le­on­tol­ogist Mark Mc­Me­na­min of Mount Hol­yoke Col­lege in Mas­sa­chu­setts, who con­ducted the new re­search with his wife, Di­anna Schulte-Mc­Me­na­min, al­so of the col­lege.

They ad­mit their case is cir­cum­stant­ial, but they point to ev­i­dence in­clud­ing mod­ern cases of oc­to­puses kill­ing sharks; var­i­ous feats of oc­to­pus in­tel­li­gence; the fact that oc­to­puses com­monly leave piles of shells and bones in their dens from con­sumed prey; and the ob­serva­t­ion that they some­times ma­ni­pu­late such re­mains. 

They are pre­sent­ing their pro­pos­al Oct. 10 at the an­nu­al meet­ing of the Ge­o­log­i­cal So­ci­e­ty of Amer­i­ca in Min­ne­ap­o­lis.

Around 200 mil­lion to 250 mil­lion years ago, the so-called Tri­as­sic pe­ri­od, pred­a­to­ry, dinosaur-like rep­tiles called ichthyosaurs prowled the oceans. Nine fos­sils of these beasts, about as long as school bus­es, lie at Ber­lin-Ich­thy­o­saur State Park in Ne­vada. 

They have a long his­to­ry of per­plex­ing re­search­ers, in­clud­ing the world's ex­pert on the site, the late Charles Lew­is Camp of the Uni­vers­ity of Cal­i­for­nia at Berke­ley. "Camp puz­zled over these fos­sils in the 1950s," said Mc­Me­na­min. "In his pa­pers he keeps re­fer­ring to how pe­cu­liar this site is. We agree—it is pe­cu­liar." 

Camp spec­u­lat­ed that the beasts had died from an ac­ci­den­tal strand­ing or a tox­ic plank­ton bloom. But these sce­narios are ass­o­ciated with shal­low water, and more re­cent work on the sur­round­ing rocks sug­gest it was deep, Mc­Me­na­min notes.

When Mc­Me­na­min and his daugh­ter vis­ited the fos­sils at the re­mote state park, "it be­came very clear that some­thing very odd was go­ing on," said Mc­Me­na­min. "It was a very odd con­figura­t­ion of bones." Ev­i­dence sugg­ested the shon­isaurs weren't all bur­ied at the same time, he said. More strange­ly, it looked like the bones had been pur­pose­fully re­ar­ranged. That got him think­ing about a mod­ern pred­a­tor known for this sort of in­tel­li­gent ma­nipula­t­ion of bones. "Mod­ern oc­to­pus will do this," Mc­Me­namin said.

Mc­Me­namin likens the pro­posed an­cient oc­to­pus to the leg­end­ary "krak­en," an oc­to­pus-like sea mon­ster with arms the length of ships and claimed to have prowled off the coast of Nor­way in the 1750s. The pre­his­tor­ic an­i­mal must have been twice the length of the shon­isaurs to kill them, he con­tends.

In the fos­sil bed, some of the shon­isaur ver­te­brae are ar­ranged in cu­ri­ous pat­terns with al­most ge­o­met­ric reg­u­lar­ity, Mc­Me­namin not­ed: the ver­te­brae are in dou­ble line pat­terns, with pieces nest­ing in a fit­ted way as though part of a puz­zle. 

The pro­posed Tri­as­sic kra­ken "could have been the most in­tel­li­gent in­ver­te­brate ev­er," say the re­search­ers in their re­port. Even creep­i­er: The ar­ranged ver­te­brae re­sem­ble the pat­tern of suck­er discs on an oc­to­pus ten­ta­cle, with each ver­te­bra strongly re­sem­bling a suck­er. In oth­er words, the ver­te­bral disc "pave­ment" seen at the state park "may rep­re­sent the ear­li­est known self por­trait," the re­port adds.

Could an oc­to­pus really have tak­en out such huge pred­a­to­ry rep­tiles? No one would have be­lieved it un­til the Se­at­tle Aquar­i­um set up a vi­deocam­era at night a few years ago to find out what was kill­ing the sharks in one of their tanks, Mc­Me­namin ar­gues. The aquar­i­um staff was shocked to learn an oc­to­pus was the cul­prit. Vi­deo of one of these at­tacks is on­line.

The "Tri­as­sic kra­ken" was probably "do­ing the same thing," said Mc­Me­namin. Among the pieces of ev­i­dence, he adds, are many more ribs bro­ken in the shon­isaur fos­sils than would seem ac­ci­den­tal and the twisted necks. "It was ei­ther drown­ing them or break­ing their necks."

Of course, it's the per­fect Tri­as­sic crime be­cause oc­to­puses are mostly soft-bodied and don't fos­silize well. Only their small mouth parts are hard. So there is no physical evid­ence of an at­tack­er. But Mc­Me­na­min said he is­n't wor­ried: "we have a very good case."


source
-- Roxxfoxx~~Adventures in Geology Penguin News Today Penguinology: The Science of Penguins Gentoo Penguins of Gars O'Higgins Station, Antarctica Canis lupus 101  Dances with Werewolve Through Golden Eyes


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