Science News, Helen Thompson, March 31,
2016
Researchers suspect that a roughly
10-million-year-old snake once had a pattern of bright green and black pigments
on its back, with yellow and pale brown coloration on its sides, fading into a
creamy underbelly.
An ancient snakeskin preserves the bright
green coloration of its wearer, researchers report March 31 in Current Biology.
In the early 20th century, miners
discovered the fossilized remains of an 11.2-million- to 8.7-million-year-old
snake in northeastern Spain .
Modern researchers have managed to reconstruct the snake’s coloration, thanks
to the presence of skeletons of the animal’s pigment cells in fossilized skin
layers.
Comparing the cell shapes and
architectures to that of modern snakes, the team identified structures linked
to green, yellow, brown, black and creamy hues. This color palette probably
aided in camouflage, the researchers posit.
Previous ancient color reconstruction
efforts have been limited to the reds, browns and blacks of melanin pigment,
but this was a unique case. Calcium phosphate exceptionally preserved the
snake's skin layers, opening the door to reconstructing green and yellow
coloration in the fossil record.
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