logo
Paleontologists uncover a nearly complete skull of a 30 million-year-old apex carnivore in Egypt

Paleontologists uncover a nearly complete skull of a 30 million-year-old apex carnivore in Egypt

CNN17-02-2025

With sharp catlike teeth and a doglike body, ancient carnivores called hyaenodonts were once at the top of the food chain, but the entire lineage was wiped out about 25 million years ago, leaving prehistorians to grapple with what caused the apex predator to go extinct.
Now, an international team of paleontologists has found a new piece of the puzzle — a nearly complete skull of a previously unidentified species of hyaenodonta. The discovery could bring scientists one step closer to understanding these ferocious beasts and their evolutionary history.
The fossil, which was unearthed in the Fayum Depression of Egypt's Western Desert, is the most complete skull of the hyaenodonta subfamily Hyainailourinae to be found in Africa. The skull dates back to the early Oligocene Epoch around 30 million years ago, according to a study published Monday in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
When the study authors uncovered the skull in 2020, they shouted excitedly as they realized their rare find, recalled lead author Shorouq Al-Ashqar, a doctoral student at Mansoura University Vertebrate Paleontology Center and a research assistant at American University in Cairo.
'It was an amazing moment … ,' Ashqar said. 'This skull is important to us, not only because it's complete and three dimensional, and actually it's a beautiful one, but also it provides us with new traits to know more about this extinct group of carnivorous animals.'
The researchers named the leopard-size species Bastetodon syrtos as a nod to the cat-headed ancient Egyptian goddess Bastet because of the species' unique shorter snout compared with other hyaenodonts, according to the study. Combined with sharp, knifelike teeth, the snout would have given the creature an extremely powerful bite, according to Ashqar.
'We can frankly say that Bastetodon was the king of the ancient Egyptian forest,' Ashqar said.
The fossil provides a rare glimpse into a time of global environmental changes and faunal turnover, when some species go extinct while new ones are introduced due to varying changes in the habitat. Those changes helped determine the cat and dog predators seen today, researchers said.
Ancient apex carnivores
Hyaenodonta fossils have been found across North America, Europe, Asia and Africa. Some were as big as rhinos, while others resembled small weasels.
During the Oligocene period, the Fayum Depression was a lush, tropical rainforest. Bastetodon would have preyed on primates such as Aegyptopithecus, an ancient relative of humans, as well as early hippos and elephants.
'I think of them as like really beefy wolverines or basically like pitbulls. They have really big heads that were just covered in muscle,' said study coauthor Dr. Matthew Borths, curator of fossils at the Duke Lemur Center Museum of Natural History at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.
It is rare to find ancient carnivore fossils because there are fewer carnivores in an ecosystem than other animals such as herbivores. (For instance, you're more likely to see a squirrel or a deer on a hike than a cougar, Borths said.) And often, only teeth or fragments of skulls are found, he added.
The discovery of such a complete skull allows researchers to learn concrete traits of the animal, such as how big muscle attachments were compared with the size of its teeth, the size of its brain or even the strength of its sense of smell, Borths said.
Researchers also compared the Bastetodon skull with the fossils of another, bigger hyaenodonta species found in Africa about 120 years ago. Dubbed Sekhmetops by the study authors, the latter group was originally thought to be related to a European group of hyaenodonts. While there were only jaws and cheekbones found of the larger species, the researchers were able to compare findings from those remains with the Bastetodon skull and demonstrate that both carnivores belonged to the same group of hyaenodonts that originated in Africa.
'It is rare to find such a complete specimen, preserving not just the robust teeth but also delicate aspects of cranial anatomy,' said Dr. Nancy Stevens, an anthropology professor and director of the Museum of Natural History at the University of Colorado Boulder, in an email.
'It is only with detailed analyses of specimens like this that we can explore the complex movement patterns of predators across the landscapes of the past,' said Stevens, who was not involved with the study. 'This gives rise to a better understanding of the faunal dynamics around us today.'
Faunal turnover
The Eocene-Oligocene boundary was a global cooling event that occurred about 34 million years ago, causing mass extinction and major faunal turnover. The hyaenodonts that survived then showed how adaptable and resilient the animals were, Borths said.
A few million years later, however, they went extinct and were replaced by the relatives of dogs, cats and hyenas. By filling in the gaps of the fossil record, paleontologists can better understand why the once successful hyaenodonts died out and how much adaptation and pressure from the environment a lineage can handle, Borths added.
'The end of the Hyaenodonta in the late Oligocene shows how climate change, competitive pressures and changes in prey availability affected carnivores,' said Dr. Cathrin Pfaff, a postdoctoral researcher and lecturer at the Institute of Palaeontology at the University of Vienna in Austria. She was not involved with the study.
'The fact that they lost out to cats and dogs in their evolution is still a mystery but might be caused by their highly specialized dentition,' Pfaff said in an email, referring to the arrangement and development of the animals' teeth. 'Because of this, such a complete find as described here brings us a step closer to solving the mystery, even (if) it is just a medium sized specimen.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scientists recreate lost recipes for a 5,000-year-old Egyptian blue dye
Scientists recreate lost recipes for a 5,000-year-old Egyptian blue dye

Yahoo

time02-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Scientists recreate lost recipes for a 5,000-year-old Egyptian blue dye

For being the world's oldest known synthetic pigment, the original recipes for Egyptian blue remain a mystery. The approximately 5,000-year-old dye wasn't a single color, but instead encompassed a range of hues, from deep blues to duller grays and greens. Artisans first crafted Egyptian blue during the Fourth Dynasty (roughly 2613 to 2494 BCE) from recipes reliant on calcium-copper silicate. These techniques were later adopted by Romans in lieu of more expensive materials like lapis lazuli and turquoise. But the additional ingredient lists were lost to history by the time of the Renaissance. This is particularly frustrating not just for preservation efforts, but because of Egyptian blue's unique biological, magnetic, and optical properties. Unlike other pigments, the Egyptian blue emits near-infrared light wavelengths that are unseen by the human eye, making it a promising tool for anticounterfeiting efforts, fingerprinting, and even high-temperature superconductors. But after studying ancient materials and manufacturing methods, a team led by Washington State University (WSU) researchers in collaboration with the Smithsonian's Conservation Institute and the Carnegie Museum of Natural History have created not just one historically accurate Egyptian blue, but 12 of them. While the results are detailed in a study published in npj Heritage Science, first author and WSU materials engineer John McCloy said the project began as something much more casual. 'It started out just as something that was fun to do because they asked us to produce some materials to put on display at the museum, but there's a lot of interest in the material,' he said in a statement. McCloy and colleagues first consulted both a mineralogist and an Egyptologist to create a list of potential materials to develop the pigments, including mixtures of calcium, copper, silicon dioxide, and sodium carbonate. From there, they varied the ingredient proportions before heating them anywhere from 1 to 11 hours at around 1,832 degrees Fahrenheit—temperatures achievable by ancient Egyptian artisans. Once the mixtures cooled at varying rates, the team analyzed each final result using techniques including X-ray diffraction, electron beam X-ray microanalysis, and X-ray nano-computed tomography. Finally, they compared these samples to a pair of Egyptian artifacts including a piece of cartonnage—a papier-mâché-like material used for items like funerary masks. 'One of the things that we saw was that with just small differences in the process, you got very different results,' McCloy said. For example, cooling rates played an important role in influencing the end color. Slower cooling times offered deeper blues, while quicker cooling produced pale gray and green mixtures. Despite this, the bluest of the 12 variants only required about 50 percent of their ingredients to exhibit blue hues. McCloy's team also confirmed that cuprorivaite—the naturally occurring mineral equivalent to Egyptian blue—remains the primary color influence in each hue. Despite the presence of other components, Egyptian blue appears as a uniform color after the cuprorivaite becomes encased in colorless particles such as silicate during the heating process. 'It doesn't matter what the rest of it is, which was really quite surprising to us. You can see that every single pigment particle has a bunch of stuff in it—it's not uniform by any means,' he added. The results go beyond establishing Egyptian blue recipes that largely mirror ancient examples. McCloy and colleagues hope that these initial 12 variants will be used in conservation work to restore historic relics as accurately and vividly as possible.

UN, Iran and Egypt meet in Cairo to discuss Iran's nuclear program
UN, Iran and Egypt meet in Cairo to discuss Iran's nuclear program

Yahoo

time02-06-2025

  • Yahoo

UN, Iran and Egypt meet in Cairo to discuss Iran's nuclear program

CAIRO (AP) — Iranian, Egyptian and U.N. leaders met in Cairo on Monday to discuss Iran's nuclear program after a report from the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency said Iran is further increasing its stockpile of uranium enriched to near weapons-grade levels. Rafael Mariano Grossi, the head of the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency, said the agency compiled the report because Iranian's uranium enrichment was an ongoing concern to the IAEA's board of governors. 'We hope that by providing the clarification we will be providing an incentive for clarity, an incentive for a peaceful solution and a diplomatic solution,' Grossi said in Cairo. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi and Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty, though it was unclear if Araghchi would meet directly with Grossi. The two spoke by phone early Sunday. Araghchi wrote on the messaging app Telegram that he stressed Iran's 'continuous cooperation' when he spoke with Grossi. The confidential IAEA report, which was seen by The Associated Press on Saturday, raised a stern warning, saying Iran is now 'the only non-nuclear-weapon state to produce such material,' something the agency said was of 'serious concern.' Iranian leadership believes the IAEA report is politically motivated by Grossi's hopes to become the U.N. secretary general. Grossi is attempting to attract votes of several members of the U.N. Security Council with the report, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, Mohammad Eslami, told the official IRNA news agency late Sunday. 'He basically has chosen a political attitude, and this political attitude has led the environment to be more political rather that technical," Eslami said. Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, who is mediating the U.S.-Iran talks, visited Tehran on Saturday to present the latest U.S. proposal for ongoing talks. Araghchi wrote on Telegram that Iran is examining the proposal and crafting a response. The U.S.-Iran talks are an attempt to limit Iran's nuclear program in exchange for lifting of some of the crushing economic sanctions the U.S. has imposed on the Islamic Republic, which have strained relations for almost 50 years. The fifth round of talks between the U.S. and Iran concluded in Rome last week with 'some but not conclusive progress,' al-Busaidi said at the time. Iran's deputy foreign minister published a detailed response Sunday, which rejected many of the report's findings. Kazem Gharibabadi noted that out of the IAEA's 682 inspections of 32 states, 493 were carried out in Iran alone. 'So long as a country's nuclear activities are under the IAEA's monitoring, there is no cause for concern,' he said. 'The Islamic Republic of Iran is neither pursuing nuclear weapons nor does it possess any undeclared nuclear materials or activities.' The IAEA report said Iran as of May 17 had amassed 408.6 kilograms (900.8 pounds) of uranium enriched up to 60%. That is an increase of almost 50% since the IAEA's last report in February. The 60% enriched material is a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90%. ___ Lidman reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

Archaeologists Found 3 Tombs That Were Hidden Beneath the Sand for 3,500 Years
Archaeologists Found 3 Tombs That Were Hidden Beneath the Sand for 3,500 Years

Yahoo

time30-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Archaeologists Found 3 Tombs That Were Hidden Beneath the Sand for 3,500 Years

Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: Egyptian archaeologists discovered three tombs in Luxor from Egypt's New Kingdom. Each tomb came with an inscription to give clues as to the name and position of its inhabitant. Some of the tomb architecture was impressively expansive. Three New Kingdom tombs were recently discovered in Luxor. While that's worth celebrating on its own, it gets even better—researchers found inscriptions in the tombs that help tell the stories of the high-ranking officials that were once buried there. According to a translated statement from Egypt's Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, the three tombs—discovered in the necropolis of Draa Abu El-Naga on the west bank of Luxor—all come from the New Kingdom (1539 to 1077 B.C.). One is from the 19th Dynasty, led by the Ramesside family, and the other two are from the 18th Dynasty. The 19th Dynasty tomb belonged to Amun-em-Ipet—an official who likely worked in the temple or the estate of Amun. While much of the funerary furniture and decorations had faded or been destroyed over time, artistry that was still visible depicted scenes of offering, funerary furniture carriers, and banqueting. The tomb itself was highlighted by a small courtyard that led into the square chamber. The west wall once featured a spot to hold funerary goods, but it was destroyed during later reuse. The two 18th Dynasty tombs were similar in design. One belonged to a person named Baki, who was likely a granary silo supervisor. Baki's tomb is more complex than the one from the 19th Dynasty, with a long hallway-styled courtyard leading to a second courtyard ahead of the main entrance. The tomb then turns and opens into a long chamber with a funerary room. The third tomb belonged to a person called Es, who had a longer list of responsibilities and was known to be a key official in the Temple of Amun in the oasis, the governor of the northern oasis, and a scribe. The tomb closely mirrors that of Baki, and features a small courtyard containing a well, followed by the tomb's main entrance, and then a transverse hall leading to another (incomplete) longitudinal hall. Mohamed Ismail Khaled, the Secretary General of Egypt's Supreme Council for Antiquities, said that experts will continue to study the carvings and hope to gain more information about the tomb's owners. Sherif Fathy, Egypt's Minister of Tourism and Archaeology, called the find by a scientific and archaeological achievement that will greatly contribute to attracting more visitors to the region. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store