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MONSTER MOLLUSK FOSSIL FOUND
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Sixty-five million years ago, a giant
12-foot long mollusk lived at the bottom of the sea near
Antarctica. The discovery of a complete fossil of the
creature, an ammonite known as Diplomoceras maximum, is causing
researchers to rethink their ideas on mollusk evolution.
Ammonites, which are related to the pearly nautilus, are among
a group of invertebrates that date back more than 400 million
years. The animals vanished approximately 65 million
years ago, the same time that dinosaurs became extinct.
The Diplomoceras takes it name from its tube-like shell that
doubled back upon itself. The pleated shell resembled a clothes
dryer vent hose curled in the shape of a paper clip. The fossil
shell is about six inches in diameter, tapering slightly from the
opening where the animal lived to the tip of the last chamber.
Uncoiled, the fossil would measure more than 12 feet. The
soft-bodied animal, which was about six feet long, lived in the
extended chamber at the front half of the shell. The other half
consisted of chambers that were filled with gas and fluid.
"Previously, we were at a loss as to what these creatures
looked like. Our guesses were based on a series of fragments,"
said William J. Zinsmeister, professor of geosciences at Purdue
University. Zinsmeister had published a composite drawing of the
animal in the Journal of Paleontology in 1989 after finding a
number of fossil fragments in the same region of Antarctica.
"We now see that our previous picture was not totally
correct," he said, noting that the new fossil shows that the
large part of the shell where the animal lived, and the animal
itself,
were much longer than predicted. "It would have made a nice
morsel - a real Cretaceous-era hot dog - for a mososaur," he
added.
Mososaurs were huge marine lizards that preyed on ammonites.
A mososaur skull that measured 3 feet long with teeth 2 to 3
inches long was found by the Purdue group during its stay in
Antarctica.
The find also has given the scientists new respect for the
lowly Diplomoceras, long considered to be an evolutionary
dead-end because it is the most awkward-looking member of the
ammonite family.
"Hydrodynamically, this was the Forrest Gump of ammonites. It
was slow and deliberate, but judging from the size of this
fossil, it did very well for itself and was able to compete with
its more agile relatives," noted Zinsmeister.
The completeness of the fossilized ammonite shell also
provides enough information to indicate that the animal kept its
shell and added to it throughout its life, Zinsmeister says.
The sheer size of the fossil also has made the scientists
rethink their position on the Diplomoceras' place in evolution.
Such uncoiled ammonites, which tend to appear sporadically in
evolutionary records, once were viewed as evolutionary dead-ends,
serving only as a fountainhead for their more symmetrical
descendants.
"For years, it was assumed that the spiral-shaped ammonite
was ideal. It was thought that the uncoiled ammonites, like this
one, couldn't compete with their more mobile, agile cousins, and
so quickly died out. We now see that appearance is deceptive. The
Diplomoceras represents one of the last members of its species
to become extinct. It may have looked ungainly, but it wouldn't
have reached this size, or lasted as long, unless it was a good
competitor," noted Zinsmeister.
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Transmitted: 95-05-01 21:30:28 EDT
Related information at other Web sites
Royal Tyrrell Museum, Alberta, Canada: Finding Fossils
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