Fossils provide insight into porpoises’ evolutionary process
Mon, Apr 6, 2015-
Tags
Research into porpoise fossils found in Teisho, Hokkaido led by Professor Mizuki Murakami (Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Education and Integrated Arts and Sciences) reveals that unlike their contemporary equivalents, early porpoises possessed a long, narrow stout, a beak and experienced a faster rate of physical development. Furthermore, this research sheds light on the evolutionary developmental process of vertebrae in porpoises. Fossils discovered in the Koetoi Formation, which has yielded a considerable number of marine vertebrate fossils (eighteen to be exact), suggest that early porpoises were capable of swimming at high speeds similar to dolphins.
Research Article
This research is featured in the Polish paleontology magazine, “Acta Paleontologica.”
“New fossil remains from the Pliocene Koetoi Formation of northern Japan provide insights into growth rates and vertebral evolution of porpoises”
Inquiries
For inquiries about the content of this research or fossil photographs, please contact Professor Mizuki Murakami. For inquiries regarding fossils from this research currently on display at the Nakagawa EcoMuseum, please contact Yoshinori Hikida.
Mizuki Murakami
Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Education and Integrated Arts and Sciences
E-mail:[email protected] Tel:03-3207-4950
Chieko Yamasaki
Akita University, Faculty of International Resource Sciences, Mining Museum of Akita University, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
E-mail:[email protected] Tel:018-889-2798
Yoshinori Hikida
Nakagawa EcoMuseum
E-mail:[email protected] Tel:01656-7-2406