Project 4917: Ethan D. Mooney, Tea Maho, R. Paul Philp, Joseph Bevitt, Robert R. Reisz. 2024. Paleozoic Cave System Preserves Oldest Known Evidence of Terrestrial Vertebrate Skin. Current Biology. 34:1-10.
Specimen: † Captorhinus aguti (OMNH 52541)
View: Crania 1/2

Abstract

The richest and most diverse assemblage of early terrestrial tetrapods is preserved within the infilled cave system of Richards Spur, Oklahoma (289–286 Mya). Some of the oldest-known terrestrial amniotes are exquisitely preserved here because of early impregnation and encasement of organic material by oil-seep hydrocarbons within rapidly deposited clay-rich cave sediments under toxic anoxic conditions. This phenomenon has also afforded the preservation of exceedingly rare integumentary soft tissues, reported here, providing critical first evidence into the anatomical changes marking the transition from the aquatic and semi- aquatic lifestyles of anamniotes to the fully terrestrial lifestyles of early amniotes. This is the first record of a skin-cast fossil (3D carbonization of the skin proper) from the Paleozoic Era and the earliest known occurrence of epidermal integumentary structures. We also report on several compression fossils (carbonized skin impressions), all demonstrating similar external morphologies to extant crocodiles. A variety of previously unknown ossifications, as well as what are likely palpebral ossifications of the deeper dermis layer of the skin, are also documented. These fossils also serve as invaluable references for paleontological reconstructions. Chromatographic analysis of extractable hydrocarbons from bone and cave samples indicates that the source rock is the Devonian age Woodford Shale. Hydrocarbons derived from ancient marine organisms interacting with geologically younger terrestrial vertebrates have therefore resulted in the oldest-known preservation of amniote skin proper.


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Article DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.12.008

Project DOI: 10.7934/P4917, http://dx.doi.org/10.7934/P4917
This project contains
  • 3 Media
  • 1 Taxon
  • 1 Specimen
Total size of project's media files: 11.93M

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MorphoBank Project 4917
  • Creation Date:
    11 October 2023
  • Publication Date:
    17 January 2024
  • Project views: 680

    Authors' Institutions

    • Jilin University

    • University of Oklahoma

    • University of Toronto

    • Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation



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    Ethan Mooney
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