Fuente: Smithsonian Science
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 11 de julio de 2012 22:33
  Autor: John Barrat
  Asunto: Prehistoric turtle was size and shape of a big car tire
| Posted on 11    July 2012 Featured, Research Topics, paleontology Paleontologist Carlos    Jaramillo’s group at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama    and colleagues at North Carolina State University and the Florida Museum of    Natural History discovered a new species of fossil turtle that lived 60    million years ago in what is now northwestern South America. The team’s    findings were published in the Journal    of Paleontology. 
 Image above: An    artist’s conception of the prehistoric turtle Puentemys mushaisaensis. (Illustration by Liz Bradford) The new turtle species is    named Puentemys    mushaisaensis because it was found in La Puente pit in Cerrejón    Coal Mine, a place made famous for the discoveries, not only of the extinct Titanoboa, the world’s    biggest snake, but also of Carbonemys,    a freshwater turtle as big as a smart car. 
 Image left;    Scientists excavate a fossil specimen of Puentemys mushaisaensis from the    Cerrejon Coal Mine. (Photo by Edwin Cadena) Cerrejon’s fossil reptiles    all seem to be extremely large. With its total length of 5 feet, Puentemys adds to    growing evidence that following the extinction of the dinosaurs, tropical    reptiles were much bigger than they are now. Fossils from Cerrejon offer an    excellent opportunity to understand the origins of tropical biodiversity in    the last 60 million years of Earth’s history. The most peculiar feature    of this new turtle is its extremely circular shell, about the size and shape    of a big car tire. Edwin Cadena, post-doctoral fellow at North Carolina State    University and lead author of the paper, said that the turtle’s round shape    could have discouraged predators, including Titanoboa, and aided in    regulating its body temperature. The width of the turtle’s    shell probably exceeded the maximum expansion of the Titanoboa’s mouth. Its    circular, low-domed shape would have increased the area of the body exposed    to the sun, helping the cold-blooded turtle warm to a temperature at which it    was more active. Related posts: 
 Tags | giant turtle, natural history,    paleontology, Tropical    Research Institute 
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