Canadian Museum of Nature unveils ancient limbed fish fossil - Action News
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Canadian Museum of Nature unveils ancient limbed fish fossil

The Canadian Museum of Nature is welcoming home about 60 fossils of Tiktaalik roseae, a prehistoric fish-like creature that was discovered on Ellesmere Island in 2004.

Tiktaalik roseae lived about 375 million years ago

Arctic fossil unveiled at nature museum

9 years ago
Duration 2:01
Ancient limbed fish fossil or Tiktaalik roseae lived about 375 million years ago.

Fossils of a prehistoric creature that stood as an intermediarypoint betweenfish and land animals wereunveiledTuesday morning at the Canadian Museum of Nature, more than a decade after paleontologists made the original groundbreaking discovery in Canada's High Arctic.

Some 60 fossils ofTiktaalikroseae, which lived about 375 million years ago, were returned to Canada this week and will now be housed at the museum, with the permission of the government of Nunavut,after being meticulously prepared and studied for the past decade in the U.S.

The fossils will not immediately be put on public display,but instead will bestudied further at the museum. The eventual plan is to return the fossils to Nunavut, although there is no precise timeline yet for when that will happen.

Part of our shared history

Tiktaalikroseaehad fins, scales and gills like a fish, but also had a neck that allowed it to move its head independently of its body, like an amphibian.

Inside itsfin were bones that would have corresponded to parts of mammalian limbs like the forearm and the wrist, said Neil Shubin, a paleontologist at the University of Chicago who was part of the original discovery team.

Those adaptations meanTiktaalikroseae would have moved, said Shubin, muchlike a modern-day crocodile.

"A part of our history is shared with this animal behind me: the history of the origin of our elbows and wrists and necks," said Shubin. "That's what this creature really tells us about-- how did fish evolve to walk on land, and what was our history like when our common ancestor was a fish."

The fossils were originallyfound by Shubin,Edward Daeschler of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia, Farish Jenkins Jr. of Harvard University and their colleagues.

Neil Shubin, left, and Edward Daeschler, right, were two of the original paleontologists who discovered Tiktaalik roseae on the south shores of Ellesmere Island in 2004. (Sandra Abma/CBC)

They found the fossils in the rocks of Ellesmere Island in 2004 after a four-year search in the area, and published their research in the journalNaturein 2006. Their discovery made international headlines.

The "real work," however, began once the fossils were brought south, said Shubin.

"It took years to remove the rock, grain by grain, from the fossils," said Shubin. "That's what you see. You're seeing a lot of hours spent in the lab, turning those rocks into beautiful bones."

An evolutionary 'holy grail'

Fossils of creatures having both fish and land animals features have been found before, butTiktaalikfalls into a gap between 385 million and 365 million years ago, giving researchers more details of the transition.

"That transition from finned to limbed animals has always been one of these sort of holy grails of the evolutionary story," said Daeschler.

"When we're looking at Tiktaalikroseae, we are looking at the common ancestor of all limbed animals on earth."

The nameTiktaalikcomes from a word in theInuktitutlanguage for theburbot, a serpent-like freshwaterfish. The name was supplied by Inuit elders inNunavut.

Along with the Tiktaalikroseaefossils, the Canadian Museum of Naturealso debuted about 120 pieces of other lobe-finned fossil fish from the Devonian period, which stretched from 419 million to 358 million years ago.