"Ancient Australian Air-Breathing Fish: A 380-Million-Year-Old Predator Unearthed"

Researchers have discovered a new species of ancient lobe-finned fish, named Harajicadectes zhumini, in Australia's Red Center, dating back 380 million years. This fish, with large fangs and bony scales, is not too distantly related to the fishes that gave rise to the earliest limbed tetrapods and is distinctive for its large openings on the top of its skull, thought to facilitate surface air-breathing. The synchronized appearance of this air-breathing adaptation may have coincided with a time of decreased atmospheric oxygen during the mid-Devonian. This discovery is the culmination of 50 years of exploration and research, with the most complete specimen found in 2016 and transferred to the Museum and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory in Darwin.
- An ancient Australian air-breathing fish from 380 million years ago Phys.org
- 380-Million-Year-Old Fanged Fish Found In One Of The World's Oldest Lakes IFLScience
- Bizarre Prehistoric Predator Fish Breathed Air, Had Fangs And Four 'Limbs' ScienceAlert
- 380-Million-Year-Old Fossils of Air-Breathing Tetrapod Fish Found in Australia Sci.News
- New life for ancient predatory fish from the red centre - Australian Geographic Australian Geographic
Reading Insights
0
1
3 min
vs 4 min read
82%
660 → 118 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Phys.org