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One of the world's oldest flying seabird fossils discovered in North Canterbury

Wednesday 22 January 2014, 11:55AM

By Canterbury Museum

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An artist's impression of what Australornis lovei may have looked like 58 million years ago.
An artist's impression of what Australornis lovei may have looked like 58 million years ago. Credit: Derek Onley

CHRISTCHURCH

Scientists from New Zealand’s Canterbury Museum and the Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum in Frankfurt Germany, announced today the discovery of one of the world’s oldest flying seabirds.

The bones of this new species were found in the Waipara greensand deposits of North Canterbury on New Zealand’s South Island. These fossil deposits are of Paleocene age (about 58 million years old) and were formed in the deep waters of a very warm sea off the coast of Zealandia (the continental fragment that New Zealand rests upon), shortly after the event that caused the mass extinction of the dinosaurs and many marine organisms.

The species has been named Australornis lovei after its discoverer Mr Leigh Love, an amateur fossil collector from Waipara (a transliteration of the Latin scientific name is Love’s Southern Bird). The fossil comes from the same deposits as the world’s oldest Penguin Waimanu and is thought to be approximately 58 million years old.

Australornis appears to be most similar to two species described from the late Cretaceous (c. 70 million years before present) of the Antarctic Peninsula and highlights the links between Antarctica and New Zealand in the late Cretaceous and early Paleocene.

“This new species is important in our understanding of bird evolution because although there are a number of bird groups described from the late Cretaceous, most belong to groups not present on earth today,” says Dr Paul Scofield of Canterbury Museum.

Dr Gerald Mayr of the Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum says the find is exciting. “We hope to find more material of this pivotal species to enable a better understanding of its relationships and too allow us to better understand early avian evolution.”

Funding for this research comes from the R.S. Allan Memorial fund.

Extra information:
Illustration attached: An artist’s impression of what Australornis lovei may have looked like 58 million years ago. This illustration is free for use with articles but please add acknowledgement to the artist Derek Onley.
Interviews can be arranged with:
Paul Scofield +64 3 366 9429 ext 853; 022 161 9230; Email: pscofield@canterburymuseum.com
Dr Gerald Mayr  + 49 69 7542-1348 Email: Gerald.Mayr@senckenberg.de
Comments from people not associated with the research can be obtained from Otago University’s Professor Ewan Fordyce Email ewan.fordyce@otago.ac.nz Phone: +64 3 479 7510
 

ENDS