Fossil is one of earliest four-legged creatures

June 26, 2008|Seth Borenstein, Associated Press

WASHINGTON - Scientists unearthed a skull of the most primitive four-legged creature in Earth's history, which should help them better understand the evolution of fish to advanced animals that walk on land.

The 365 million-year-old fossil skull, shoulders, and part of the pelvis of the water-dweller, Ventastega curonica, were found in Latvia, researchers report in a study published in today's issue of the journal Nature.

Even though Ventastega is probably an evolutionary dead-end, the finding sheds new details on the evolutionary transition from fish to tetrapods.

Tetrapods are animals with four limbs and include such descendants as amphibians, birds, and mammals.

While an earlier discovery found a slightly older animal that was more fish than tetrapod, Ventastega is more tetrapod than fish.

The fierce-looking creature probably swam through shallow, brackish waters, measured about 3 or 4 feet long, and ate other fish. Scientists believe it had stubby limbs with an unknown number of digits.

"If you saw it from a distance, it would look like a small alligator, but if you look closer you would find a fin in the back," said lead author Per Ahlberg, a professor of evolutionary biology at Uppsala University in Sweden. "I imagine this is an animal that could haul itself over sand banks without any difficulty. Maybe it's poking around in semi-tidal creeks picking up fish that got stranded."

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