Aug. 2, 2006 — The first fossilized bone marrow has been found in the bones of 10-million-year-old frogs, salamanders and tadpoles by scientists working in northeastern Spain, the leader of an international research team said.
Palaeontologist Maria McNamara said Wednesday the find could yield unprecedented insights into prehistoric creatures, such as whether they hibernated or whether they were cold-blooded or warm-blooded.
McNamara, a researcher at the School of Geological Sciences of University College Dublin (UCD), said her team from Ireland, Spain and the U.S. found the fossils in ancient lake deposits in the Libros area of Spain.
McNamara said one of the most exciting aspects of the discovery is what the marrow will tell scientists about creatures that lived during what is known as the later Miocene period.
"The original organic material is still there," according to McNamara, whose research was published in this month's Geology, the journal of the Geological Society of America.
"It is still organic in composition, whereas most traces of soft tissues you find in the fossil record, which are very rare anyway, have rotted away and just the shape of the tissue is preserved in mineral," she said.
"Tissue like bone marrow carries a lot of physiological information. They can tell you the state of the organism when it died, was it healthy, did it hibernate, where did it produce its red blood cells and whether it was warm-blooded or cold-blooded," she said, adding, "They would be pretty important to find for some other fossil groups like dinosaurs. It could help to resolve some debate about whether they were warm-blooded or cold-blooded."
She said researchers were now doing tests in UCD to see if any bio-molecules, like amino acids and proteins, are preserved.
The research is being undertaken in collaboration with scientists at the Institut Jaume Almera and the Fundacion Conjunto Palaeontologico de Teruel in Spain, and the American Museum of Natural History in New York.