These ancient crocodiles walked on 2 legs like dinosaurs


A reconstruction of the ancient landscape of South Korea with crocodile track-makers. Image via Anthony Romilio.

An international team of researchers say that a trackway of ancient footprints – first thought to belong to a pterosaur – may actually have been made by ancestors of today’s crocodiles that walked on their two hind legs like dinosaurs. The fossil footprints, which the researchers estimate are 110 to 120 million years old, were discovered in the Jinju rock formation, near Sacheon City in South Korea.

University of Queensland paleontologist Anthony Romilio is a co-author of the study, which was published June 11, 2020 in Scientific Reports.. He said in a statement:

At one site, the footprints were initially thought to be made by a giant bipedal pterosaur walking on the mudflat. We now understand that these were bipedal crocodile prints. The footprints measure around 24 centimeters (9 inches), suggesting the track-makers had legs about the same height as human adult legs. These were long animals that we estimate were over 3 meters (10 feet) in length.

A reconstruction of ancient South Korean crocodile track-makers. Image via Anthony Romilio

While footprints were everywhere on the site, the researchers noticed that there were no handprints. Study leader Kyung Soo Kim, from Chinju National University of Education, said:

Typical crocodiles walk in a squat stance and create trackways that are wide. Oddly, our trackways are very narrow looking – more like a crocodile balancing on a tight-rope.

When combined with the lack of any tail-drag marks, it became clear that these creatures were moving bipedally.

They were moving in the same way as many dinosaurs, but the footprints were not made by dinosaurs. Dinosaurs and their bird descendants walk on their toes. Crocodiles walk on the flat of their feet leaving clear heel impressions, like humans do.

Researchers initially questioned the absence of hand impressions from the trackways, given that today’s typical crocodiles are ‘four-legged’ or quadrupedal. Romilio said:

Fossil crocodile tracks are quite rare in Asia, so finding an abundance of nearly one hundred footprints was extraordinary.

As an animal walks, the hind feet have the potential of stepping into the impression made by the hand and ‘over-printing’ it, but we find no evidence of this at these Korean sites.

It isn’t due to poor preservation either, because these fossils are spectacular, they even have the fine details of the toe-pads and scales on their soles preserved.

Fossilized trackways made by ancient South Korean bipedal crocodiles. Image via Seul Mi Bae

Biologist Michela Johnson studies crocodylomorphs – extinct ancestors of modern crocodiles – at the University of Edinburgh. She told New Scientist that the fossilized tracks appear to have very distinct, chunky-looking toes, in addition to impressions from crocodile-like scales. She added:

But modern crocodiles have at least some webbing between toes in their back feet, whereas these tracks don’t appear to have any.

Bottom line: Researchers say that a trackway of 110–120 million-year-old fossil footprints may have been made by ancient crocodiles that walked on two hind legs about the same length as adult human legs.

Source: Trackway evidence for large bipedal crocodylomorphs from the Cretaceous of Korea

Via University of Queensland



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2ZwnyTd

A reconstruction of the ancient landscape of South Korea with crocodile track-makers. Image via Anthony Romilio.

An international team of researchers say that a trackway of ancient footprints – first thought to belong to a pterosaur – may actually have been made by ancestors of today’s crocodiles that walked on their two hind legs like dinosaurs. The fossil footprints, which the researchers estimate are 110 to 120 million years old, were discovered in the Jinju rock formation, near Sacheon City in South Korea.

University of Queensland paleontologist Anthony Romilio is a co-author of the study, which was published June 11, 2020 in Scientific Reports.. He said in a statement:

At one site, the footprints were initially thought to be made by a giant bipedal pterosaur walking on the mudflat. We now understand that these were bipedal crocodile prints. The footprints measure around 24 centimeters (9 inches), suggesting the track-makers had legs about the same height as human adult legs. These were long animals that we estimate were over 3 meters (10 feet) in length.

A reconstruction of ancient South Korean crocodile track-makers. Image via Anthony Romilio

While footprints were everywhere on the site, the researchers noticed that there were no handprints. Study leader Kyung Soo Kim, from Chinju National University of Education, said:

Typical crocodiles walk in a squat stance and create trackways that are wide. Oddly, our trackways are very narrow looking – more like a crocodile balancing on a tight-rope.

When combined with the lack of any tail-drag marks, it became clear that these creatures were moving bipedally.

They were moving in the same way as many dinosaurs, but the footprints were not made by dinosaurs. Dinosaurs and their bird descendants walk on their toes. Crocodiles walk on the flat of their feet leaving clear heel impressions, like humans do.

Researchers initially questioned the absence of hand impressions from the trackways, given that today’s typical crocodiles are ‘four-legged’ or quadrupedal. Romilio said:

Fossil crocodile tracks are quite rare in Asia, so finding an abundance of nearly one hundred footprints was extraordinary.

As an animal walks, the hind feet have the potential of stepping into the impression made by the hand and ‘over-printing’ it, but we find no evidence of this at these Korean sites.

It isn’t due to poor preservation either, because these fossils are spectacular, they even have the fine details of the toe-pads and scales on their soles preserved.

Fossilized trackways made by ancient South Korean bipedal crocodiles. Image via Seul Mi Bae

Biologist Michela Johnson studies crocodylomorphs – extinct ancestors of modern crocodiles – at the University of Edinburgh. She told New Scientist that the fossilized tracks appear to have very distinct, chunky-looking toes, in addition to impressions from crocodile-like scales. She added:

But modern crocodiles have at least some webbing between toes in their back feet, whereas these tracks don’t appear to have any.

Bottom line: Researchers say that a trackway of 110–120 million-year-old fossil footprints may have been made by ancient crocodiles that walked on two hind legs about the same length as adult human legs.

Source: Trackway evidence for large bipedal crocodylomorphs from the Cretaceous of Korea

Via University of Queensland



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2ZwnyTd

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