By RANDOLPH E.
SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) MARCH 17,
2000 — A fossil snake with legs that could upset at least some
theories about the evolution of reptiles has been discovered gathering
dust in a museum drawer.
The fossil had been at
Hebrew University in Jerusalem since researcher Georg Haas' death in the
early 1980s, said Olivier Rieppel of the Field Museum in Chicago.
Rieppel and a team of
researchers rediscovered the fossil and gave it a scientific description
and official name — Haasiophis terrasanctus — in Friday's issue of the
journal Science.
The snake's legs aren't much
to brag about. They are too small in relation to the animal's body to have
any function in moving the snake, Rieppel said.
Modern pythons have a
rudimentary hind limb, usually little more than a claw of cartilage tipped
with bone that they use during mating and occasional fighting, and it is
possible that Haasiophis' leg served a similar purpose, he said.
Found in the West Bank area
of Israel, Haasiophis was a marine snake, Rieppel said. He said it appears
to have been able to widen its jaw like boas and pythons, enabling it to
eat prey larger than its body.
Haasiophis is the second
limbed snake to come from the same site.
The first, Pachyrhachis
problematicus, had been thought by some researchers to be at the base of
the snake family tree, indicating a marine origin for snakes. Others
speculate that snakes evolved from small land lizards.
Rieppel said the new find
appears to be closely related to Pachyrhachis.
But his team's analysis also
indicates that these two snakes were not primitive ancestors, but advanced
snakes similar to modern boas and pythons. The new anatomical
interpretation suggests that neither Pachyrhachis nor Haasiophis have
anything to do with snake origins, he said. |