99m-Year-Old Lizard Trapped in Amber Could Give Clue to 'Lost Ecosystem'

99m-Year-Old Lizard Trapped in Amber Could Give Clue to 'lost Ecosystem'
 Scientists have discovered that a piece of amber containing
a fossilised lizard is 99m years old. Photograph: Reuters

Specimen analysed after discovery in Myanmar is found to be well preserved and 75m years older than previous tropical lizard discoveries.

A fossilised lizard found in south-east Asia preserved in amber dates back 99m years, US scientists have determined, making it the oldest specimen of its kind and a “missing link” for reptile researchers. The lizard is 75m years older than the previous record holder, according to researchers at the Florida museum of natural history, who announced the finding this week.

“It was incredibly exciting to see these animals for the first time,” Edward Stanley, a member of the research team, said on Saturday.



“It was exciting and startling, actually, how well they were preserved.” Scientists believe the chameleon-like creature was an infant when it was trapped in a gush of sticky resin while darting through a tropical forest in what is now Myanmar.

The creature’s entire body, including its eyes and colorful scales, was unusually well-preserved, Stanley said. The other reptiles trapped in the amber, including a gecko and an arctic lizard, were also largely intact. It was found decades ago in a mine along with other ancient, well-preserved reptile fossils, but the scientists were able to analyse the finds only recently.

Small reptiles have delicate bodies and typically deteriorate quickly, Stanley said. Being encased in solid amber helped to lock the specimen together. Stanley and other researchers used high-resolution digital X-ray technology to examine the creatures and estimate the age of the amber without breaking it.

The discovery would help researchers learn more about the “lost ecosystem, the lost world” to which the creatures belonged, Stanley said, and it might help researchers learn more about the creatures’ modern relatives. “It’s kind of a missing link,” Stanley said.


The above post is reprinted from materials provided by Reuters.
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