By
MICHAEL TARM
Associated Press Writer
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) APRIL
30, 2000 Like other paleontologists, Elga Mark-Kurik had long
pondered that moment in geological time when the first ancestor to all
land vertebrates, including man, stepped from the water and walked onto
solid ground.
But the 71-year-old never
imagined a fossil of that first half-fish, half-animal species may have
already been in her collection for more than 40 years.
At a recent forum at
London's Natural History Museum, scientists said the 375-million-year-old
jawbone Mark-Kurik found in 1953 and a similar fossil found in Latvia in
1964 could be the missing link between fish and animals.
Scientists agree the 25,000
species of land vertebrates, including homo sapiens, all descend from a
small group of creatures that were not yet quite land animals and no
longer quite fish. But nobody had ever unearthed proof.
The most developed fish,
whose fossils are relatively common, date back to about 385 million years;
the earliest, clearly land-roving animals are some 365 million years old
leaving a gap of 20 million years between fish and animal.
An article by Mark-Kurik and
fellow paleontologists Per Ahlberg of Sweden and Ervins Luksevics of
Latvia claims that the Baltic fossils fall within that gap. The article
will be published in the August edition of the prestigious British journal
Paleontology.
That one of paleontology's
Holy Grails may have been discovered in Estonia and Latvia has been
celebrated across the two former Soviet Baltic republics and at Tallinn's
Institute of Geology where Mark-Kurik works.
Sitting in her office, she
proudly pulled the thumb-sized fossil out of a small blue box and
gleefully handed it to a reporter.
But she hastened to explain
that thanks to repressive Moscow rule, which only ended with the collapse
of the Soviet Union in 1991, it was a fossil find of a lifetime that was
unnecessarily delayed.
"This
has been very exciting for scientists here,'' said Mark-Kurik. "We
had gone through such a long, dreadful period in the Soviet Union.''
As a schoolgirl in 1941, a
year after Soviet forces occupied the Baltic states, Mark-Kurik and her
family hid in fear one night when KGB troops knocked on their door. She
said they were lucky to escape deportation.
She also says it was
isolation behind the Iron Curtain that kept her and other scientists from
recognizing the importance of the fossil she found in an Estonian cave as
a graduate student.
For decades, the Soviet
regime kept her from traveling abroad to meet colleagues and see other
fossil collections, and the KGB closely monitored the rare Western
scientist who visited Estonia.
Scientific rules also
generally required that research papers be written in Russian, so Western
paleontologists couldn't readily glean insights from Mark-Kurik's
published works.
"Paleontology
is very much a world science,'' she said. "You must see fossils from
around the world and you must exchange information with other scientists
to understand what you have. We couldn't under the Soviets.''
After the country regained
independence in 1991, Mark-Kurik suddenly had the freedom but not the
money to travel. She still shares an office the size of a walk-in closet
with two other researchers and is paid less than 6,000 Estonian kroons
or $400 in U.S. currency a month.
The turning point came in
the mid-'90s, when Mark-Kurik, Ahlberg, Luksevics and a Russian scientist
won a grant from NATO to compare ancient rocks and fauna from Scotland and
the Baltics.
They weren't trying to find
the fish-animal link. But Ahlberg had studied the field in depth and the
pieces of the puzzle suddenly fell together during a routine look at the
Baltic jaw-bone fossils.
Jaw bones have distinctive,
complicated joints and undergo huge changes with evolution; by comparing
and contrasting them with other better-known specimens, jaw bones are
especially good at revealing traits of their owner.
The Baltic fossils Ahlberg
held in his hands had just the right mix of fish and land-vertebrate
features that he knew well from other fossil collections, and he
understood their significance almost instantly.
"These
(Baltic) fossils fall bang in the middle of the gap,'' he said.
The animal was dubbed
Livonia multidentata in Latin after the region where the fossils were
found and its unique, five rows of razor-sharp teeth.
"I
haven't seen anything like it, with multiple rows of teeth,'' said Jenny
Clack, a paleontologist at the University of Cambridge who was not
connected to the find. "This find is certainly part of the story of
the origin of tetrapods (early land animals). It's the latest twist.''
But unanswered questions
remain. One is whether it still had fins or already had legs. To find out,
Ahlberg said the search will turn to unearthing a whole skeleton.
If it exists, it would
likely be here in northern Europe, which, because of the earth's shifting
tectonic plates, was at the equator and featured shallow, nutrient-rich
tropical waters 400 million years ago.
But Mark-Kurik says chances
of finding a full skeleton are slim.
That leaves paleontologists
extrapolating how it looked by comparing Livonia multidentata to its
nearest cousins, for which there are full skeletons: It probably looked
like a small crocodile, though with gills and a fish-like tail.
She herself hardly seems
enamored with man's first terrestrial forefather.
"It
must have been horribly ugly ... I wouldn't want it walking around my
house,'' she said.
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