| Australian scientists discover oldest live birth |
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Scientists in Australia reported Thursday they had
discovered the remains of the oldest vertebrate mother ever found.
The fossilized 375-million-year-old placoderm fish, preserved with an
embryo still attached with an umbilical cord, was found in the Gogo
area of northwest Australia. The fossil fish is the oldest-known
example of a mother giving birth to live young, and pushes back the
emergence of this reproductive technique by some 200 million
years. Prior to the discovery, the earliest evidence for this form of
reproduction came from reptile fossils dating 248 to 65 million years
ago during the Mesozoic Era.The scientists have named their 25-cm
fossil Materpiscis attenboroughi, in honor of Sir David Attenborough,
who first spotlighted the Gogo fish sites in the 1979 series Life on
Earth.The find offered proof that an ancient species had advanced
reproductive biology comparable to modern sharks and rays, according to
John Long, head of sciences at the Museum of Victoria in Melbourne. "It
is not only the first time ever that a fossil embryo has been found
with an umbilical cord, but it is also the oldest known example of any
creature giving birth to live young," Long said in an interview with
Reuters. Source: Red Orbit
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