500-Pound Prehistoric Chook Was a ‘Giga-Goose,’ Fossils Reveal
Scientists reveal the face of Australia’s large, extinct “giga-goose”
Simply 50,000 years in the past giants roamed the Australian continent—together with a wombat relative the scale of a rhinoceros, a monitor lizard so long as a crocodile, a heavy-set kangaroo and a “marsupial lion.” And now researchers have uncovered and reconstructed the cranium of a 6.5-foot-tall, 500-pound flightless hen that they’ve nicknamed the “giga-goose,” resolving greater than a century of hypothesis about this species’ ancestry.
In 1893 camel-riding palaeontologists dug up a virtually full skeleton of a large hen that, tens of 1000’s of years prior, had gotten itself mired within the mud of Lake Callabonna in South Australia. Whereas its physique was remarkably preserved, its fossil cranium was “very dodgy”—crumbly, crushed and distorted—says Phoebe McInerney, an evolutionary biologist who lately obtained a Ph.D. from Flinders College in Australia.
With no clear image of its head, many scientists assumed that this hen, referred to as Genyornis newtoni, was a mega model of the emu, an ostrichlike flightless ratite that roams Australia immediately. Others thought it was a sort of land fowl like a rooster. However these had been solely guesses. All huge birds look roughly comparable from the neck down, McInerney explains. No matter a hen’s evolutionary lineage, “when the body gets large and flightless, all the same things happen,” she says: stumpy wings, a broad rump, cumbersome legs.
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“The skull is what will retain those more complex family indicators,” McInerney says. “So for the last 120 or so years we have been looking for better skull fossils.”
And now McInerney and her colleagues at Flinders have discovered them. In a paper printed on Monday in Historic Biology, the researchers describe and diagram a full Genyornis cranium, plus a set of superbly preserved partial skulls they unearthed at Lake Callabonna between 2013 and 2019. “Seeing the skull fully out of the matrix and free from the dirt around it was definitely a ‘wow’ event,” McInerney says. “We weren’t really sure what to expect, and we kept finding new parts of the skull that were hidden within.”
The fossils revealed a novel face—fairly totally different from some other residing or extinct hen however most just like a duck or a goose. This implies Genyornis belongs within the Anseriformes: an order of birds additionally referred to as waterfowl, starting from geese to swans to South America’s screamers.
“There’s no close analogue for these birds” elsewhere on this planet, says Nic Rawlence, a paleoecologist at New Zealand’s College of Otago, who was not concerned within the analysis. “They are a truly unique Australian island experiment, as unique as koalas and kangaroos,” he provides. “With this amazing new discovery, we can now actually start to reconstruct the evolution and the behavior of this animal.”
The vast gape, robust chunk and muscle attachments of Genyornis’ beak counsel it had superb motor management, main the researchers to take a position that the hen fed by tearing leaves and fruit from waterside vegetation. The cranium fossils additionally revealed diversifications for aquatic habitats, similar to constructions that prevented water from coming into the ears—additional proof that this was primarily a huge goose that relied on freshwater habitats, McInerney says.
Aboriginal Australians doubtless encountered Genyornis. Big birds characteristic in rock artwork and tales, and there’s a phrase for “giant emu” in at the least one Aboriginal language.
Some researchers have interpreted fragments of large burned eggshells as proof that people cooked and ate Genyornis eggs, however the id of the shells stays controversial.
Scientists are additionally nonetheless debating why Australia’s megafauna vanished. When people arrived on the continent, its once-lush panorama was already drying out. The extinctions could have been triggered by local weather change, looking or a mix of each. In the present day Lake Callabonna is usually dry, salty and treeless—no place for a water-loving giga-goose.