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  • 3 months ago
This 375-million-year-old fish, the closest known relative of the ancestors of limbed animals such as humans, likely evolved the foundation for rear legs even before the move to land, researchers say.
Transcript
00:00Music
00:16And the name of this missing link is Titalik rosei.
00:20It means large, shallow water fish in the Nunavut language of northern Canada.
00:25The fossilised bones of Titalik show just how much it is a missing link between fish and animals.
00:31It had scales and fins like a fish, but its bones are very similar to ours of our bodies today.
00:37This is the shoulder bone, and you can see the socket where the arm fitted in.
00:42This, although it's short and stubby, is the humerus, the bone of the upper arm here.
00:48These two are the radius and ulna, the two bones of the lower arm.
00:52There are wrist bones here, but instead of fingers, because it not yet evolved properly,
00:57there are rays like the fins of a fish.
01:00It's one of those fossils that shows us a stage where we've acquired some of the features of a major group,
01:07but not all of them.
01:08So, in a sense, it's equivalent to that proto-bird called Archaeopteryx,
01:14which has got some features of reptiles. It's got a long tail, it's got teeth and so on.
01:20But it's also got feathers and wings, so it's got bird features as well.
01:24So, it's that kind of combination of characters.
01:28So, the rest of the será.
01:30So, I've incorporated some of them.
01:32And I want to see the story of the story.
01:35So, let's see.
01:37The story of the old one.
01:38I'm going to see all of you.
01:40So, hey, I've got a lot of the story.
01:42I'm going to sing the story.
01:46I'm going to see the story of the story of the story of the day,
01:49and I just wanna see you in the story of the second teenager.
01:51I'm going to go to the story of the second Dann.
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