April 15, 2008 -- Fossils of two ancient, extinct mammals are helping piece together the elephant family tree. Modern elephants and their relatives, which fall into the order Proboscidea, form a diverse clan that includes hyraxes, manatees and dugongs. That group can now be linked to two extinct beasts, known as Barytherium and Moeritherium, which emerged around 50 million years ago. Surprisingly, they didn't look much like elephants or their living relatives either. According to Alexander Liu, lead researcher on a new study of the fossils, Moeritherium was much smaller than today's elephants and was instead "similar in size and stature to a modern tapir, having a prehensile upper lip rather than a trunk and weighing roughly 250 to 300 kg (551 to 661 pounds)." Modern elephants, by contrast, can weigh up to 24,000 pounds. Barytherium, on the other hand, was a little more elephant-like, given its trunk, but was still much smaller than today's elephants, Liu told Discovery News. Liu, a researcher in the University of Oxford's Department of Earth Sciences, along with colleagues Erik Seiffert and Elwyn Simons, reconstructed the habitats and behaviors of the two extinct animals just by analyzing 11 of the beasts' teeth. Their findings are published in the latest issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Their detective work involved studying carbon and oxygen isotopes found in the teeth, which date to 37 million years ago and were excavated at the Birket Qarun Formation in northern Egypt. Isotopes are forms of chemical elements that possess different numbers of neutrons, or atomic weights. Over time, they leave behind detectable signatures. Carbon, for example, is a building block of vegetation, so carbon isotopes within tooth enamel can reveal the basic types of food that the individual ate. In this case, the researchers found that both Moeritherium and Barytherium consumed mostly freshwater plants, with Barytherium also possibly eating terrestrial plants. Cool Jobs: Fossil Hunter |
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