Article from University of
Queensland, Australia, 3/28/18
Contacts-Media: Dr Caitlin Syme, caitlin.syme@uqconnect.edu.au, @taphovenatrix, +61
(0)428 642 061; Dr Steven Salisbury, @implexidens, s.salisbury@uq.edu.au, +61
(0)407 788 660.
An artist’s rendering of
Isisfordia duncani. Credit: Matt Herne.
March 28, 2018
The death, decay and burial of an
ancient extinct crocodilian from outback Queensland has revealed more about
Cretaceous Period landscapes in Australia.
Scientists from The University of
Queensland have completed a forensic-style investigation into fossils of the Isisfordia
duncani, and found the diminutive crocodilians lived and died in
brackish-water deltas.
School of Biological Sciences Dr
Caitlin Syme said it was already known that the crocodile
carcasses eventually ended up in the deltas, but it was uncertain if they had
lived in the delta or drifted in after death.
“A decaying animal carcass can
swell or bloat, and if it is washed into a lake or river, it can float and
drift along in river currents,” Dr Syme said.
“If this is what happened to
individuals of Isisfordia duncani, then it is possible they were already dead
by the time their carcasses drifted in to the delta.”
Dr Syme compared the crocodilian
fossils to modern animal carcasses and used the science of taphonomy—the study
of death, decay, burial, and preservation of animal and plant remains—to
predict the movement of the carcasses before they were fossilised.
“We counted which fossil bones
and how many were present, whether they were still joined together as they
would be in life, and whether they were scratched or broken,” she said.
“When a carcass floats in water,
it will continue to decay, and parts of the skeleton will detach and sink.
“With carcasses of modern
animals, for instance, the head is often the first part of the body that falls
off.
“Where a fossil specimen
comprises isolated and broken leg and hip bones, it indicates that the carcass
probably drifted for quite a while before parts of it sunk and were eventually
buried.”
Although some Isisfordia duncani
fossils were incomplete, researchers found two with a large proportion of their
bones still connected and intact, indicating the crocodile died near to where
they lived.
“Both juvenile and adult
crocodilian fossils are found at this site, which also suggests that these
crocodilians were breeding in or near to these ancient deltas,” Dr Syme said.
Dr Steven Salisbury said the
findings were significant because they suggested that the central-western
Queensland Cretaceous Period climate was warm and wet enough for the
cold-blooded reptiles to live and breed.
“The results of this study
greatly improve our understanding of this part of outback Queensland during the
Age of Dinosaurs, and provides valuable information on the life and times of
the one of the world’s first modern crocodilians,” Dr Salisbury said.
Fossils of Isisfordia duncani
were first found by a local grazier, Ian Duncan, near the outback Queensland
town of Isisford in the mid-1990s.
The species was named in 2006 and
the Cretaceous crocodilian is considered to be close to the ancestry of all
modern crocodilians: true crocodiles, alligators and caimans, and the Indian
gharial.
Seven individual Isisfordia
duncani have been found, making it the best-represented Cretaceous crocodilian
in Australia.
Fossils and dioramas of
Isisfordia duncani are on display at the Outer
Barcoo Interpretation Centre and at the Queensland Museum.
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