Archaeopteryx ''
Archaeopteryx is a
genus of
theropod dinosaur closely related to the birds. Since the late 19th century, it has been accepted by palaeontologists, and celebrated in lay reference works, as being the oldest known bird, though a study in 2011 has cast doubt on this assessment, suggesting instead that it is a non-
avialan dinosaur closely related to the origin of birds. It lived in what is now southern Germany in the
Late Jurassic period around 150 million years ago, when Europe was an
archipelago in a shallow warm tropical sea, much closer to the equator than it is now. Similar in shape to a
European magpie, with the largest individuals possibly attaining the size of a
raven,
Archaeopteryx could grow to about 0.5 metres (1.6 ft) in length. Despite its small size, broad wings, and inferred ability to fly or glide,
Archaeopteryx has more in common with other small
Mesozoic dinosaurs than it does with modern birds. In particular, it shares the following features with the
deinonychosaurs (
dromaeosaurs and
troodontids): jaws with sharp teeth, three fingers with claws, a long bony tail, hyperextensible second toes ("killing claw"),
feathers (which suggest
homeothermy), and various skeletal features. These features make
Archaeopteryx a clear candidate for a transitional fossil between dinosaurs and birds, making it important in the study both of dinosaurs and of the origin of birds. The first complete specimen was announced in 1861, and ten more
Archaeopteryx fossils have been found since then. Most of the eleven known fossils include impressions of feathers—among the oldest direct evidence of such structures. Moreover, because these feathers take the advanced form of
flight feathers,
Archaeopteryx fossils are evidence that feathers began to evolve before the Late Jurassic.
Australopithecus afarensis '' - walking posture The hominid
Australopithecus afarensis represents an evolutionary transition between modern bipedal humans and their quadrupedal
ape ancestors. A number of traits of the
A. afarensis skeleton strongly reflect bipedalism, to the extent that some researchers have suggested that bipedality evolved long before
A. afarensis. In overall anatomy, the pelvis is far more human-like than ape-like. The
iliac blades are short and wide, the sacrum is wide and positioned directly behind the hip joint, and there is clear evidence of a strong attachment for the
knee extensors, implying an upright posture. (the closest living relative of humans) and had teeth that were more human than ape-like.
Pakicetids, Ambulocetus The
cetaceans (whales, dolphins and porpoises) are
marine mammal descendants of land
mammals. The
pakicetids are an
extinct family of hoofed mammals that are the earliest whales, whose closest sister group is
Indohyus from the family
Raoellidae. They lived in the Early
Eocene, around 53 million years ago. Their fossils were first discovered in North Pakistan in 1979, at a river not far from the shores of the former
Tethys Sea. Pakicetids could hear under water, using enhanced bone conduction, rather than depending on
tympanic membranes like most land mammals. This arrangement does not give directional hearing under water.
Ambulocetus natans, which lived about 49 million years ago, was discovered in Pakistan in 1994. It was probably amphibious, and looked like a
crocodile. In the Eocene,
ambulocetids inhabited the bays and estuaries of the Tethys Ocean in northern Pakistan. The fossils of ambulocetids are always found in near-shore shallow marine deposits associated with abundant marine plant fossils and
littoral molluscs. Their diet probably included land animals that approached water for drinking, or freshwater aquatic organisms that lived in the river. It is one of several lines of ancient sarcopterygians to develop adaptations to the oxygen-poor shallow water habitats of its time—adaptations that led to the evolution of tetrapods. Well-preserved fossils were found in 2004 on
Ellesmere Island in
Nunavut, Canada.
Tiktaalik lived approximately 375 million years ago.
Paleontologists suggest that it is representative of the transition between non-tetrapod vertebrates such as
Panderichthys, known from fossils 380 million years old, and early tetrapods such as
Acanthostega and
Ichthyostega, known from fossils about 365 million years old. Its mixture of primitive fish and derived tetrapod characteristics led one of its discoverers,
Neil Shubin, to characterize
Tiktaalik as a "
fishapod." Unlike many previous, more fish-like transitional fossils, the "fins" of
Tiktaalik have basic wrist bones and simple rays reminiscent of fingers. They may have been
weight-bearing. Like all modern tetrapods, it had rib bones, a mobile neck with a separate pectoral girdle, and lungs, though it had the gills, scales, and fins of a fish. Tetrapod footprints found in Poland and reported in
Nature in January 2010 were "securely dated" at 10 million years older than the oldest known
elpistostegids (of which
Tiktaalik is an example), implying that animals like
Tiktaalik, possessing features that evolved around 400 million years ago, were "late-surviving relics rather than direct transitional forms, and they highlight just how little we know of the earliest history of land vertebrates."
Amphistium are asymmetrical, with both eyes on the same side of the head. '' with one eye at the top-center of the head
Pleuronectiformes (flatfish) are an
order of
ray-finned fish. The most obvious characteristic of the modern flatfish is their asymmetry, with both eyes on the same side of the head in the adult fish. In some families the eyes are always on the right side of the body (dextral or right-eyed flatfish) and in others they are always on the left (sinistral or left-eyed flatfish). The primitive
spiny turbots include equal numbers of right- and left-eyed individuals, and are generally less asymmetrical than the other families. Other distinguishing features of the order are the presence of protrusible eyes, another adaptation to living on the
seabed (
benthos), and the extension of the dorsal fin onto the head.
Amphistium is a 50-million-year-old fossil fish identified as an early relative of the flatfish, and as a transitional fossil. In
Amphistium, the transition from the typical symmetric head of a vertebrate is incomplete, with one eye placed near the top-center of the head. Paleontologists concluded that "the change happened gradually, in a way consistent with evolution via
natural selection—not suddenly, as researchers once had little choice but to believe." ==Fossil record==