Showing posts with label Baden Württemberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baden Württemberg. Show all posts

Friday, 6 September 2024

Archaeologists uncover grave of fourth century Alammani tribesman in Baden-Württemberg, southern Germany.

Archaeologists from the consultancy firm ArchaeoBW carrying out survey work at Gerstetten in Baden-Württemberg, southern Germany, for Stuttgart Regional Council ahead of a housing construction project have uncovered a wood-lined grave, according to a press release issued by the council on 27 August 2024. The grave, which was first discovered in May, contained a partial skeleton as well as some trade goods.

A partial skeleton uncovered in a grave site in Baden-Württemberg, southern Germany. Gizem Dakmaz/Stuttgart Regional Council.

Wooden graves of this type are associated with the Alammani, an ancient Germanic tribe first mentioned in Roman records by Lucius Cassius Dio in 213 AD. Such graves are typically date to the fourth century AD and are found in groups of five-to-twelve, and it is possible that other undiscovered graves lie close to the one discovered in Gerstetten. 

The skeleton and other items from the grave were taken to the laboratory of the State Office for Monument Preservation of Stuttgart Regional Council in Esslingen, where examination of the skeletal remains determined that they came from a man aged about 60. A radiocarbon date obtained from a rib suggest that the man died between 263 and 342 AD.

As well as the skeleton, a number of items interpreted as grave goods were also found, including a Roman-style glass cup, which may have come from the Roman fort of Guntia (modern Günzburg in Bavaria), two ceramic pots, similar in style to other pots known from the Middle Elbe-Saale region, and a bone comb.

Two ceramic pots from a fourth century grave site in Baden-Württemberg, southern Germany. Gizem Dakmaz/Stuttgart Regional Council.

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Monday, 3 June 2024

Four confirmed deaths and thousands evacuated in flooding in southern Germany.

Four people have been confirmed dead and several more are missing as thousands of emergency workers battle flooding across much of southern Germany. The first fatality is reported to have occurred when a 22-year-old firefighter drowned after a rescue boat capsized in the town of Pfaffenhofen der Ilm in Bavaria, which has been subject to some of the worst flooding, following the failure of two dams on the River Paar, a tributary of the Danube. The second is was of a 43-year-old woman who became trapped in a cellar in Upper Bavaria. The remaining two deaths were also of people trapped in a basement, in Schorndorf in the Rems-Murr. Parts of the states of Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria have recorded rainfalls of 130 mm and 129 mm within 24 hours respectively on Friday 31 May 2024, compared to averages for the states of 118 mm and 101 mm for the entire month of May. Parts of the national rail and autobahn network have been forced to close due to flooding, and authorities are advising against non-essential travel to the affected regions.

Flooding in the town of Lauingen in Bavaria on Saturday 1 June 2024. Stefan Puchner/DPA/Picture Alliance.

This is the fourth significant outbreak of flooding in Germany this year, a continuation of a pattern that has been emerging over the past few years. In 2021 flooding in the Rhineland Palatinate cost 135 people their lives and made 1700 homeless. The flooding has been caused by far higher levels of rain falling across central Europe, which in turn is driven by high temperatures over the Atlantic, leading to higher rates of evaporation. 

Flooding in the town of Reichertshofen in Bavaria. Sven Hoppe/DPA.

The high temperatures experienced in the past year have been linked to a combination of anthropogenic global warming, driven by emissions of carbon dioxide and methane, with an El Niño - Southern Oscillation climate system over the Pacific Ocean, a natural phenomenon which also tends to drive temperatures upwards. However, the El Niño system appears to have been weakening over the past months, with sea surface temperatures over the eastern equatorial Pacific actually being lower than the average for 1990-2020, while global temperatures have continued to rise, suggesting that the El Niño system may be playing as large a role in driving this year's high temperatures as previously assumed.

Germany is currently the world's sixth largest producer of greenhouse gasses, and the largest in Europe, producing around 640 000 megatons of carbon dioxide per year, an amount surpassed only by China, the United States, India, Russia, and Japan. In theory the country has set ambitious plans to cut greenhouse gas emmissions by 65% of 1990 levels by 2030, and becoming carbon neutral by 2045. but it is now thought very unlikely that this can be achieved.

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Monday, 31 October 2022

Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum: A new species of Massopodan Sauropodomorph Dinosaur from the Palaeontological Collection of the University of Tübingen.

The Palaeontological Collection of the University of Tübingen contains one of the largest assemblages of Sauropodomorph Dinosaurs in Europe, but also one of the least studied. Much of this material was collected from sites around Tübingen, Aixheim and Löwenstein in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and classified under the genus Plateosaurus

The genus Plateosaurus was once used to classify almost all non-Sauropod Sauropodomorph Dinosaurs, and by the mid twentieth century contained over 20 species, of which only four are considered valid today. Unfortunately, while it is now recognised that the non-Sauropod Sauropodomorph Dinosaurs are a more diverse group than once understood, and that understanding this diversity is the key to understanding the emergence of the true Sauropods, one of the most remarkable groups of organisms ever to appear on Earth, several rival schemes for the classification of this group have appeared, hampering this understanding.

In a paper published in the journal Vertebrate Zoology on 8 September 2022, Omar Rafael Regalado Fernández of the Fachbereich Geowissenschaften an der Universität Tübingen, and Ingmar Werneburg, also of the Fachbereich Geowissenschaften an der Universität Tübingen, and of the Senckenberg Centre for Human Evolution and Palaeoenvironment an der Universität Tübingen, describe a new species of Sauropodomorph Dinosaur from the Palaeontological Collection of the University of Tübingen, based upon a specimen, GPIT-PV-30787, collected from Lower Dinosaur Bed at Obere Mühle in 1932.

The complex nature of Sauropodomorph Dinosaur taxonomy meant that Regalado Fernández and Werneburg were obliged to carry out multiple phylogenetic analyses in order to try to accommodate specimen GPIT-PV-30787 into the competing phylogenies for the group. Fortunately, these produced reasonably consistent results, with the specimen being found to be closely related to Schleitheimia schutzi, making it a Massopodan Sauropodomorph, close to the origin of the true Sauropods.

Based upon this information, Regalado Fernández and Werneburg describe specimen GPIT-PV-30787 as the holotype of a new species, giving it the name Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum, where 'Tuebingosaurus' refers to Tübingen and 'maierfritzorum' honours Wolfgang Maier, professor of evolutionary zoology in Tübingen from 1987 to 2007, and Uwe Fritz, former editor-in-chief of the journal Vertebrate Zoology.

Specimen GPIT-PV-30787 comprises a complete pelvis (three sacral vertebrae, two ilia, two pubes, two ischia), five anterior caudal vertebrae, four chevrons, left femur, left tibia, left and right fibulae, left astragalus, left calcaneum, metatarsal I, and pedal fingers 3 and 4.

Reconstruction of Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum, as a quadruped Dinosaur, using the outline of Riojasaurus as a base, next to the silhouette of Friedrich von Huene. The drawing of the bones is based on and modified from the original illustrations of specimen 'GPIT IV' (the name originally ascribed to GPIT-PV-30787) by von Huene. The right fibula is marked in grey as it was found nearby with similar measurements to the left fibula and has been assumed to be part of the same individual. Regalado Fernández & Werneburg (2022).

Regalado Fernández and Werneburg's phylogeny suggests that Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum is a Massopodan, making it the earliest member of the group known from the Upper Triassic Trossingen Beds. Despite this taxonomic placement, Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum still shares a number of features more generally associated with Plateosaurian Sauropodomorphs, most notably a heel-like projection in the posterior part of the ischiadic peduncle of the ilium and a straight lateral margin in metatarsal II, features which led to the assumption that this was a specimen of Plateosaurus

This presence of Plateosaurian-like features in early Massopodan Dinosaurs is unlikely to be unique to Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum, and re-examination of other historic specimens at Tübingen and other palaeontological collections may provide more examples, helping to unravel the origins of the Sauropods.

Reconstruction of the last moments in the life of Tuebingosaurus maierfritzorum (collection number of the painting: GPIT-PV-41827). The cortical bone on the left side of the fossil is fractured into flakes, which can be explained if the carcass was exposed over a long time on the mud, two to four years, before being buried – in the reconstruction, the Animal will fall to its right body side. The reconstruction shows the animal sinking in a mud trap, attacked by a Rauisuchian, Teratosaurus, which has also been found in the Trossingen Formation in Baden-Württemberg. In the background, a herd of Plateosaurus trossingensis runs away from the scene. The flora in the swamp is reconstructed based on fossils from the Germanic basin, with shoots of Horsetails and Ferns covering the swamp and a forest comprising Cycads (Taeniopteris), Lycophytes (Lepacyclotes) and Coniferous Plants (Brachyphyllum). Regalado Fernández & Werneburg (2022).

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Friday, 17 July 2020

Germany's largest known meteorite discovered.

A suspected meteorite taken to the Institute of Planetary Research at the German Aerospace Centre in January this year (2020), has been confirmed to be of extra-terrestrial origin. The object, now referred to as the Blaubeuren Meteorite after the town in Baden-Württemberg where it was found, was discovered in 1989 by a homeowner while digging a cable trench. It weighs 30.26 kg, making it the largest ever meteorite found in Germany, and is thought to have fallen to Earth several centuries before being discovered. The meteorite has been identified as a type H4-5 Chondrite (High iron ordinary Chondrite), with a high nickel and iron content, making it particularly dense. This type of meteorite is thought likely to have originated in the Main Asteroid Belt. The Blaubeurren Meteorite shows signs of having been in an impact prior to it's arrival on Earth, suggesting that in was deflected from the Main Asteroid Belt by a collision with another body. 

The Blaubeuren Meteorite. Gabriele Heinlein/German Aerospace Centre.

Objects of this size probably enter the Earth's atmosphere several times a year, though unless they do so over populated areas they are unlikely to be noticed. They are officially described as fireballs if they produce a light brighter than the planet Venus. The brightness of a meteor is caused by friction with the Earth's atmosphere, which is typically far greater than that caused by simple falling, due to the initial trajectory of the object. Such objects typically eventually explode in an airburst called by the friction, causing them to vanish as an luminous object. However this is not the end of the story as such explosions result in the production of a number of smaller objects, which fall to the ground under the influence of gravity (which does not cause the luminescence associated with friction-induced heating).
 
Thin sections of the Blaubeuren Meteorite under polarised light. Addi Bischoff/Institute of Planetology/Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität Münster.

These 'dark objects' do not continue along the path of the original bolide, but neither do they fall directly to the ground, but rather follow a course determined by the atmospheric currents (winds) through which the objects pass. Scientists are able to calculate potential trajectories for hypothetical dark objects derived from meteors using data from weather monitoring services.
 
See also...
 
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2020/07/fragments-of-meteorite-believed-to-have.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2020/05/nitrogen-bearing-organic-molecules-from.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2020/04/first-protein-of-extraterrestrial.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2020/03/fragment-of-meteorite-found-in-slovenia.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/10/costa-rican-mud-meterorite-acquired-by.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/07/possible-meteorite-lands-in-field-in.html
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Thursday, 7 November 2019

A Spiny Lobster larvae from the Early Jurassic Posidonia Shale of southern Germany.

The Decapoda are a group of Crustaceans with a crucial impact on modern marine ecosystems, and, in the case of edible forms, are also important for the economy of certain areas. While the many forms of adult Decapods, such as Prawns, Shrimps, Lobsters, and Crabs, are well-known to most people, their larvae are less well-known to the public. Ecologically, larvae of Decapods may even be more important than their adult counterparts given their specific role in the marine food web: they are part of the plankton, preying on smaller plankton and being prey for larger organisms. Some of these larvae reach enormous sizes, remain in the plankton for a longer time span and moult into different larval stages, in some cases more than ten distinguishable ones. Probably the most impressive examples are the larval stages of Spiny lobsters, Achelata. These larvae are called phyllosoma and can reach up to 150 mm in leg span. Phyllosoma larvae are very flat, translucent and possess long and thin legs, and have very long larval phases during which they reach these extreme sizes. To remain in the water column despite their unusually large size, these larvae ride on Jellyfish and other gelatinous macro-plankton. 

While it might be expected that fragile-appearing larval forms such as a phyllosoma are impossible to be found as fossils, quite the opposite is true. Only a handful of larval forms of other groups of Decapod Crusaceans are known, while literally thousands of fossils of phyllosoma larvae have been found. Most of these immature Achelatan fossils originate from the Late Jurassic Solnhofen-type lithographic limestone beds of southern Germany and have an age of about 150 million years. The Late Cretaceous lithographic limestone of Lebanon have a comparable preservation potential and have provided us with some fossil phyllosoma-like larvae of about 90 million years (Turonian) in age, and some remains of compound eyes from the Lower Cretaceous of Brazil have also been interpreted as possible parts of phyllosoma larvae. Yet, some of the fossil Achelatan larvae from the lithographic limestone of Lebanon and southern Germany are not phyllosoma larvae in the strict sense. These fossils have combinations of characters that occur in modern phyllosoma larvae and other characters that today only occur in post-phyllosoma stages of Achelatan Lobsters. More importantly, there are different types of such larvae, each of them possessing different types of character combinations. This indicates that the diversity of larval morphologies of Achelatan Lobsters was higher in the past.

In a paper published in the journal Acta Palaeonotologica Polonica on 14 October 2019, Joachim Haug and Carolin Haug of the Biocenter and GeoBio-Center at Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, and Günter Schweigert of the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart, describe a Phyllosoma larvae from the Early Jurassic Posidonia Shale of southern Germany, the earliest known example of such a larvae.

The Posidonia Shale outcrops across much of southern Germany, and is noted for the many exceptionally well preserved Fish and Marine Reptiles it produces, as well as Ammonites (particularly the abundant Posidonia bronni which gives the formation its name), and Crinoids. The Crustacean fauna of the Posidonia Shale is not very diverse, and fossils of Crustaceans have been considered to be rather rare. Among the known forms are the Lobster-like Uncina posidoniae, whinch reaches sizes of almost half a meter; numerous species of Polychelidan Lobsters (nowadays only known from the deep sea), among them species of Proeryon, Tonneleryon, and Coleia, rare specimens of Glypheidan Lobsters (a group nowadays only known in the fossil record from the Triassic onwards, but thought to be extinct until two species were found living in the deep Pacific), and some unclear records, among them a supposed Mantis Shrimp and a supposed specimen of a Hermit Crab, Palaeopagurus sp.

The specimen, SMNS 70449, comes from the Unterer Stein Bed at Neth Quarry at Gomaringen near
Tübingen in central Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is a late larval stage with prominent exopods, but which already has an adult-type body, proximal region of antenna and endopods of posterior thoracopods. It is rather small at this stage being only about 20 mm in main body length. The body elongate, being about five times as long as wide, and subdivided into three more or less distinct regions, an anterior region without laterally projecting appendages, a middle region with prominent laterally projecting appendages, and a posterior region without appendages, but subdivided into seven more or less distinct sections.

 Larva of Achelata, SMNS 70449, Toarcian, Lower Jurassic, Gomaringen, Southern Germany. (A) Composite microscopic photograph under cross-polarised light. (B) Colour-marked photograph indicating the visible structures. Abbreviations: ba, basipod; cx, coxa; e1–5, endopod element 1–5; m3, maxilliped 3; p2–6, pleon segment 2–6; t4–8, thoracic appendages 4–8 ('pereiopods' 1–5). Haug et al. (2019).

The anterior region of the body is about as long as maximum width of the body. Anterior rim of the anterior region as wide as maximum body width, from here the anterior region narrows posteriorly, until the posterior rim of the anterior region is about 80% of the width of the anterior rim. At the foremost part of this region are two projections directed forward and apparently broken off, these must have been significantly longer in life. The proximal width of these projections is more than 30% of the body width. Furthermore, two more structures are seen as faint impressions, most likely representing appendages that arise from close to the posterior rim of the anterior region. These are thinner than the anterior projecting structures (hence smaller diameter), about 20% of the maximum body width. The anterior region is least five times as long as wide. Proximally it has a distinct square-shaped region, set off from the further distal one.

The middle region of the body about twice as long as anterior region, and is narrower anteriorly, widening posteriorly to reach the maximum width in the middle, and remaining as wide towards the posterior. The middle region has five prominent appendages on each side, evenly distributed along the lateral rim. All appendages were apparently sub-similar originally, but are in different states of preservation. The maximum length of an appendage is about 70% of the entire body length excluding appendages; the diameter about 25% of the body width.

The overall appendage morphology has a proximal main axis with two distinct elements (the coxa and basipod). The coxa is slightly longer along proximal-distal axis than wide. The basipod is slightly longer than the coxa. Each basipod carries two branches distally, the more medially placed one presumably being the endopod and the more laterally placed one presumably being the exopod. The endopod clearly subdivided into five elements. The proximal element of endopod (the ischium) is similar to  the basipod in size. Endopod element 2 (the merus) is significantly longer, about twice as long as preceding elements, more than twice as long as wide, and slightly curved. Endopod element 3 (the carpus) is significantly shorter, slightly shorter than the coxa, also more slender, and slightly tapering distally. Endopod element 4 (the propodus) is the longest of the series, slightly shorter than the combined length of ischium and merus, and about as slender as carpus, slightly tapering distally. Endopod element 5 (the dactylus) is short, slender, inward curved, about as long as carpus, but only 50% of the diameter. The exopod is not well preserved, subdivision is not apparent, it is slender. The maximum length of exopod at least as long as merus, but only about 50% of its width (diameter).

The posterior region of the body has seven more or less distinct sections. The first section is slightly narrower than middle region, more or less rectangular in dorsal-ventral view, and short, being about 20% of the maximum body width. The second section wider, slightly longer and very gently curving backwards. Section 3 is about as wide as section 2, slightly longer, and even more curved. Section 4 has similar dimensions as 3, but is even more curved. Section 5 is longer, slightly narrower,  and also appears curved. Section 6 is similar in dimensions to 5, but appearing more rectangular again. Section 7 is sub-similar to 6. A small lobe-like structure protrudes from under section 7. The width of the posterior region is about 30% of maximum body width. 

The available structures preserved on the specimen provide Haug et al. with enough information to allow a sound systematic interpretation. The principle body organisation, with an anterior region, i.e., head region, a middle region with five pairs of prominent appendages and a posterior trunk region with seven distinct sections, is best compatible with the interpretation of the specimen as a representative of the Decapod Crustaceans. 

In this context, the anterior projections are best interpreted as massive antennae, and the superimposed appendages as the maxillipeds (thoracopods). Five pairs of appendages of the middle region represent the posterior five thoracopods (pereiopods). The seven sections of the posterior trunk are interpreted as the six pleon segments and the telson, the lobe-like structure as a part of the uropods. 

The posterior five thoracopods appear like robust walking appendages and indicate a position within Reptantia (the group including Lobsters and Crab-like forms). This may be further supported by the fact that the specimen is preserved in dorso-ventral orientation, possibly indicating a certain original compression of the body in this direction. The depressions in the median region would correspond to elevations in the thoracic sternum still indicating the individual segmentation. There are six of these corresponding to the segments bearing maxillipeds three and the five prominent posterior thoracopods.

Among crustaceans of the group Decapoda the exopods, i.e., the outer branches of biramous appendages, become reduced during ontogeny when the organism settles to the ground. The fact that exopods are still present at least on some of the thoracic appendages at a size of about 20 mm indicates that the specimen is a larval representative of Achelata. Modern larvae of Achelata with biramous appendages can reach leg spans of 150 mm.

An identity as an achelatan lobster is further supported by the fact that thoracopod 4 does not possess a chela, but a simple curved dactylus and no finger-like extension of the propodus. An additional character supporting this interpretation is that of the five prominent thoracopods the second one is slightly larger than the first one. The prominent anterior broken-off appendages, best understood as the proximal parts of the massive antennae, further support that the specimen is a representative of Achelata. 

Based on the preserved details, Haug et al. identify the new specimen as the larva of an Achelatan Lobster. So far, fossil larvae of Achelatan Lobsters were only known from the lithographic limestone of Lebanon and Southern Germany and possibly from Brazil. Hence, the new find represents the oldest report of such a larval form. 

The specimen has a morphology that is unknown from any extant Achelatan Lobster, as it combines characters that are in modern forms characteristic for phyllosoma-type larvae (e.g., presence of exopods, circular arrangement of posterior thoracopods) and post-phyllosoma stages (e.g., robust posterior thoracopod endopods, well developed and sclerotised pleon). In its overall morphology it resembles some of the intermediate stages known from the lithographic limestone of southern Germany. Most strongly it reminds of the stages of 'Palinurina' tenera, yet these are significantly larger. The leg arrangement and the rough body outline appear also quite similar to later immature stages that have been interpreted as Cancrinos claviger. Yet, the latter has already lost ontogenetically its exopods at a comparable body size. 

 Size comparison of different non-phyllosoma type Achelatan larvae. All specimens as idealised restorations. The light grey areas represent body parts not being preserved, but inferred. (A) Polzicaris sahelalmae. (B) SMNS 70449. (C) 'Palinurina' tenera, earliest (C₁) and largest (C₂) known stage. (D) Cancrinos claviger, earlier larva still possessing exopods (D₁), later larva with exopods already absent (D₂), possible juvenile, yet without triangular sternum (D₃). Haug et al. (2019).

Specimen SMNS 70449 is a new addition to the growing group of fossil Achelatan larvae with intermediate or 'intermetamorphic' morphologies. It adds yet another subtle variation concerning the combination of characters and an additional size range, smaller than most of the known forms, but larger than the exopod-bearing stages of Cancrinos claviger. Given its age, the new larva is the oldest of these larvae, being about 30 million years older than any other known Achelatan larva. It is also the second-oldest report of a Eumalacostracan (the Eumalacostraca includes all Crustaceans except Mantis Shrimps, Ostracods, Barnacles, Copepods, Remipedes, and Branchiopods) larva so far, the oldest candidate being Mesoprosopon triasinum from the Triassic Hallstatt Limestone of Austria.

See also...

https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/11/assessing-impact-of-introduced-and.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/11/louisea-nkongsamba-louisea-yabassi-two.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/11/kromtitis-lluisprietoi-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/11/petrolisthes-virgilius-new-species-of.html
https://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2019/10/planotergum-kowalevski-new-species-of.htmlhttps://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2018/10/arcotheres-placunicola-new-species-of.html
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Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Pappochelys rosinae: A Proto-Turtle from the Middle Triassic of Badem Württemberg, Germany.

Turtles have a fairly good fossil record, as would be expected for animals with bony shells inhabiting aquatic and marine habitats, but the origins of the group remain poorly understood. Molecular studies have suggested that they are members of the Diapsid Clade, which also includes Snakes, Lizards, Dinosaurs (including Birds) and Crocodiles, and probably closely related to the Archosaurs (Dinosaurs and Crocodiles), but anatomically they are very different to any other Tetrapod group, and the absence of any skull openings has led to the suggestion that they branched out from the other Amniotes (Vertebrates capable of laying eggs on dry land) very early in the history of the group, possibly even before the Synapsids (the group that includes the modern Mammals).

To date only two stem-group Turtles (animals on the way to becoming Turtles, and more closely related to Turtles than to any other group) have been described. The 260 million-year-old Eunotosaurus from South Africa is a Lizard-like animal, which has broad trunk ribs with a 'T'-shaped cross section, which form a protective case around the internal organs. The 220 million-year-old Odontochelys from China is much more Turtle-like, with a developed plastron (lower shell portion) and a beaked mouth, though it still retains side teeth and its dorsal surface is protected by flattened ribs rather than a carapace. The oldest known true Turtles with fused plastrons and carapaces are 216 million-year-old and come from Thailand and Germany,

In a paper published in the journal Nature on 20 July 2015, Rainer Schoch of the Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart and Hans-Dieter Sues of the Department of Paleobiology at the Nationa lMuseum of Natural History describe a new stem-group Turtle from the Middle Triassic Erfort Formation at Schumann Quarry in Baden-Würtremburg, Germany.

 
The first described specimen of Pappochellys rosinae. Rainer Schoch/Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart.


The new species is named Pappochelys rosinae, where 'Pappochelys' means 'Grandfather Turtle' in Greek and 'rosinae' honours Isabell Rosin, who prepared the fossils from which the species is described. The species is described from two specimens, an articulated partial skeleton lacking a skull and a disarticulated skeleton with a partial skull, though reference is made to a further 18 specimens.

Skeletal elements from which the skull of Pappochelys rosinae was reconstructed. Schoch & Sues (2015).

Pappochelys rosinae was a small, flattened, elongate animal about 20 cm in length. It lacks a true plastron (ventral shell) but has a number of large, paired bony gastrula (bony plates produced within the dermal layer) covering its ventral surface, structures which had been predicted for ancestral Turtle-like animals, but not previously seen. As in Eunotosaurus and Odontochelys the dorsal surface is protected by thick, flattened ribs with a 'T'-shaped cross section. Pappochelys lacks a beak, retaining teeth in the front and sides of its mouth and (importantly) retains two pairs of skull openings, features which clearly identify it as a Diapsid, strongly supporting the genetic evidence for a Diapsid origin for Turtles.


 Reconstruction of Pappochelys rosinae, showing the position of the skeletal elements that would become the shell in later Turtles. Rainer Schoch/Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart.


See also...

http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/desmatochelys-padillai-protostegid.htmlDesmatochelys padillai: A Protostegid Turtle from the Early Cretaceous of Colombia.        The Protostegid Turtles were a group of Turtles known from the Cretaceous that are thought to have been members of the Chelonioidea, the group that includes the two living Marine Turtle groups, the Chelonidoidea (Sea Turtles) and Dermochelyidae (Leatherback...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/a-fossil-turtle-from-early-cretaceous.htmlA fossil Turtle from the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota.                                                      One of the first Vertebrate fossils described from the Jehol Biota was Manchurochelys manchoukuoensis, a Eucryptodire Turtle from the Yixian Formation of Liaoning Province, China. The first specimen of this...
http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/a-new-species-of-turtle-from-late.htmlA new species of Turtle from the Late Cretaceous of Morocco.                                   Turtles are aquatic reptiles with a shell that encases their body, and into which the head and limbs can be retracted at least partially. They have a fossil record that dates back to the Late Triassic, about 220 million...

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