Fossil Friday: When Paleontologists Let Turtles Fly
September
27, 2024, 6:44 AM
https://evolutionnews.org/2024/09/fossil-friday-when-paleontologists-let-turtles-fly/
This
Fossil Friday features the reconstructed skeleton of the pterosaur Thalassodromeus sethi from
the Lower Cretaceous Santana Formation in Northeast Brazil. This animal must
have been a very impressive sight to behold with its estimated wing span of 17
feet and its enormous skull that was 56 inch long and “crowned” with a large
crest.
In 2013
two scientists reported about a new species, Thalassodromus sebesensis, from
the Upper Cretaceous Sebeş Formation in the Transylvanian Basin of Romania
(Grellet-Tinner et al. 2013), which they described two years later (Grellet-Tinner
& Codrea 2015) based on a single bone that supposedly represents a
premaxillary crest. The authors commented that “without doubts, T.
sebesensis is one of the most significant pterosaur discoveries in
Romania” because it is “an out of place and out of time Gondwanan tapejarid
pterosaur.” The authors also built some elaborate evolutionary hypotheses on
this discovery: for example they considered the small size of this new
species Thalassodromus species as caused by island dwarfism on
the ancient Haţeg Island. Because of associated plant fossils they speculated
about a co-evolution of tapejarid pterosaurs with flowering plants, and
interpreted T. sebesensis as a forest dweller. Isn’t it really
astonishing what a single bone allegedly can tell us about the past?
A Fly in
the Ointment
In the
very same journal a large team of twenty other scientists (Dyke et al. 2015),
including leading experts like Stephen Brusatte, Darren Naish, Mark Norell, and
Mark Witten, immediately responded to the sensational discovery and strongly
disputed its identification as a pterosaur remain. Instead they present
convincing arguments that the bone represents nothing but a piece of the
ventral shell (plastron) of the fossil turtle Kallokibotion
bajadizi from the Upper Cretaceous of Romania. That a turtle shell
can be misinterpreted as the jaw of a flying reptile by academic scientists who
studied their field for years is quite a revelation about the limits of fossil
data as well as the limits of researchers. The critics do not mince their words
and concluded: “Based on their incorrect identification of ODA-28 as a
pterosaur crest, GTC built a classic ‘house of cards’ scenario: the
misidentification of one fragmentary fossil leading to a cascade of elaborate
ideas with increasingly far-reaching implications.” Bummer! In spite of this
devastating critique, the original authors still defended their interpretation
as a tapejarid pterosaur. They boldly stated that “the comment of Dyke and his
close-knit collaborators with their respective students may actually be most
premature, as they were clearly formulated without examining the fossils” and
presented this conclusion:
It is
rather transparent that [the] Dyke et al. comment rests on assumptions (the
main text) and predictions (the conclusion) rather than on first hand
examinations with ensuing interpretations. Hence, considering their erroneous
interpretations of the several above-mentioned UBB ODA-28 anatomical features,
our conclusions are 1) that UBB ODA-28 is presently justified as a new
pterosaur species coined T. sebesensis, and 2) Dyke et al.[‘s] conspicuous
persistence, hastiness, and zeal of writing this comment, may indeed reflect of
deeper, perhaps irritating, issues in Transylvania.
Irritating
issues in Transylvania? What’s that supposed to mean, a vampire conspiracy?
This more than weird response invited a scathing comment by Mark Witten
(2014) titled “Lies, damned lies, and ‘Thalassodromeus sebesensis‘”,
which is dated to 2014 because the article and its discussion was already
available online a year prior to the printed publication in 2015. The whole
affair made a splash in the paleontological community (Black
2014, Peters
2014, Anonymous
2016), which widely agreed with the re-interpretation as a turtle shell (Pêgas
et al. 2018).
When
Renowned Experts Err
However,
such misidentifications are not restricted to some inexperienced and obscure
fringe scientists, but also happen to renowned experts such as one of the
world’s leading authorities on pterosaurs, Dr. David
Unwin from the University of Leicester. Together with his colleague
Nicholas Fraser he had described (Fraser
& Unwin 1990) two bones from the Upper Triassic of Gloucestershire as
the earliest fossil record of pterosaurs in Britain. They even identified the
material as belonging to a small new taxon of the superfamily
Rhamphorhynchoidea. About 15 years later a re-examination of these “purported
pterosaur wing metacarpals from the Upper Triassic of England” by Dalla
Veccia & Cau (2014) showed that they did not belong to a pterosaur
at all but to a drepanosaurid terrestrial reptile (also see Black
2014), which rather resembled a green iguana (read the Wikipedia page
on drepanosaurids to
learn about their highly controversial phylogenetic relationships). The latter
authors concluded that “there is no definitive evidence of the presence of
pterosaurs in the Triassic of the UK.” In several previous articles (Bechly
2022, 2023a, 2023b, 2024)
I have elaborated on numerous other problems with the origin of pterosaurs and
the interpretation of their fossil history.
A Heavy
Dose of Interpretation
Do such
misidentifications and interpretational problems show that Darwinism is false
and intelligent design is true? Of course not, but it shows that fossils are
very much data that require a heavy dose of interpretation that can and often
does introduce errors. If such misinterpretations are then used as support for
far-reaching evolutionary hypotheses, we definitely leave the realm of real
science and enter the murky waters of pseudoscientific musings. This is
relevant to the question of whether unguided Darwinian evolution is supported
by the hard evidence of the fossil record. Spoiler alert: It is not, and all
claims about alleged fossil proofs must be taken with a large grain of salt.
The hard data of the fossil record may tell us something about the existence of
extinct organisms, and of long gone biota, but they are completely silent about
the process that brought them into being. What they do show, though, is a
pattern of discontinuities and abrupt appearances, which is arguably better
explained by intelligent design than by gradual incremental changes of
neo-Darwinian evolution (Bechly
2024).
References
- Anonymous 2016. Misidentified
fossils – Turtle edition. Musings of a Clumsy
Palaeontologist February 11, 2016. https://gimpasaura.wordpress.com/2016/02/11/misidentified-fossils-turtle-edition/
- Bechly G 2022. Fossil
Friday: Ludodactylus and the Origin of Pterosaurs. Evolution
News October 28, 2022. https://evolutionnews.org/2022/10/fossil-friday-ludodactylus-and-the-origin-of-pterosaurs/
- Bechly G 2023a. Fossil Friday:
The Explosive Origin of Flying Reptiles in the Mid Triassic. Evolution
News March 19, 2023. https://evolutionnews.org/2023/05/fossil-friday-the-explosive-origin-of-flying-reptiles-in-the-mid-triassic/
- Bechly G 2023b. Fossil
Friday: Venetoraptor Is Not
the Archaeopteryx of Pterosaurs. Evolution News September
15, 2023. https://evolutionnews.org/2023/09/fossil-friday-venetoraptor-is-not-the-archaeopteryx-of-pterosaurs/
- Bechly G 2024. Fossil Friday:
Discontinuities in the Fossil Record — A Problem for
Neo-Darwinism. Evolution News May 10, 2024. https://evolutionnews.org/2024/05/fossil-friday-discontinuities-in-the-fossil-record-a-problem-for-neo-darwinism/
- Black R 2014. The Pterosaurs
That Weren’t. National Geographic August 12, 2014. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/the-pterosaurs-that-werent
- Codrea VA & Grellet-Tinner G
2015. Reply to comment by Dyke et al. on “Thalassodromeus sebesensis,
an out of place and out of time Gondwanan tapejarid pterosaur” by
Grellet-Tinner and Codrea (July 2014), DOI 10.1016/j.gr.2014.06.002. Gondwana
Research 27(4), 1683–1685. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2014.08.003
- Dalla Vecchia FM & Cau A
2014. Re-examination of the purported pterosaur wing metacarpals from the
Upper Triassic of England. Historical Biology 27(6),
684–696. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/08912963.2014.933826
- Dyke G, Vremir M, Brusatte SL,
Bever GS, Buffetaut E, Chapman S, Csiki-Sava Z, Kellner A, Martin E, Naish
D, Norell M, Ösi A, Pinheiro FL, Prondvai E, Rabi M, Rodrigues T, Steel L,
Tong H, Vila Nova BC & Witton M 2015. Thalassodromeus
sebesensis — A new name for an old turtle. Comment on “Thalassodromeus
sebesensis, an out of place and out of time Gondwanan tapejarid
pterosaur”, Grellet-Tinner and Codrea (online July 2014 DOI 10.1016/j.gr.2014.06.002). Gondwana Research 27(4),
1680–1682. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2014.08.004
- Fraser NC & Unwin DM 1990.
Pterosaur remains from the Upper Triassic of Britain. Neues
Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie – Monatshefte 1990(5),
272–282. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1127/njgpm/1990/1990/272
- Grellet-Tinner G, Codrea V &
Solomon AL 2013. Thalassodromeus sebesensis: a 42 million year
anachronistic new crested pterosaur species from the Cretaceous Haţeg
Island. The 9th Romanian Symposium on Paleontology, Iasi, Abstract
Volume, 46–47.
- Grellet-Tinner G & Codrea VA
2015. Thalassodromeus sebesensis, an out of place and out of
time Gondwanan tapejarid pterosaur. Gondwana Research 27(4),
1673–1679. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2014.06.002
- Pêgas RV, Costa FR & Kellner
AWA 2018. New Information on the Osteology and a Taxonomic Revision of the
Genus Thalassodromeus (Pterodactyloidea, Tapejaridae,
Thalassodrominae). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 38(2):
e1443273, 1–17. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/02724634.2018.1443273
- Peters D 2024. When
paleontologists disagree. The Pterosaur Heresies August
14, 2014. https://pterosaurheresies.wordpress.com/2014/08/14/when-paleontologists-disagree/
- Witton MP 2014. Lies, damned
lies, and ‘Thalassodromeus sebesensis‘. Mark P. Witton’s
blog August 13, 2014. http://markwitton-com.blogspot.com/2014/08/lies-damned-lies-and-thalassodromeus.html