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German site yields early hummingbird fossils.


Excavations in a clay pit a pit where clay is dug.

See also: Clay
 in southwestern Germany have yielded two tiny treasures. They're the first fossils of hummingbirds from the Old World and, by far, the oldest ones unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia.

Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all.
 anywhere.

Hummingbirds are the only birds that can fly forward, backward, and sideways, as well as hover for sustained periods. Those aeronautical aer·o·nau·tic   also aer·o·nau·ti·cal
adj.
Of or relating to aeronautics.



aero·nau
 talents, along with long bills and even longer tongues, enable the avian acrobats to drink nectar from small, tubular flowers. Although there are more than 300 living hummingbird species, these birds are found only in Noah and South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , says Gerald Mayr, an ornithologist at the Senckenberg Research Institute in Frankfurt, Germany.

The two new specimens, unearthed from deposits with fish and plants that date to between 34 million and 30 million years ago, have major wing bones that are short and stocky, like those of living hummingbirds. Aptly named by Mayr as Eurotrochilus inexpectatus, which translates as "unexpected European version of a hummingbird" the newly identified species had a long, narrow bill that was more than twice as long as its skull. This characteristic, as well as others related to the creature's wing structure, suggests that the birds hovered and drank nectar just as their latter-day relatives do. Mayr describes the ancient species in the May 7 Science.

Previously, the oldest fossils of hummingbirds were 1-million-year-old specimens recovered from cave deposits in Central America Central America, narrow, southernmost region (c.202,200 sq mi/523,698 sq km) of North America, linked to South America at Colombia. It separates the Caribbean from the Pacific. .

The new fossil find raises the question of why hummingbirds went extinct in the Old World. That group of continents--Europe, Asia, and Africa--had no geographic barriers that would have prevented the birds from spreading far and wide, says Mayr. Indeed, in the Western Hemisphere Western Hemisphere

Part of Earth comprising North and South America and the surrounding waters. Longitudes 20° W and 160° E are often considered its boundaries.
, hummingbird ranges include Alaska and Tierra del Fuego Tierra del Fuego (tyĕ`rä dĕl fwā`gō), [Span.=land of fire], archipelago, 28,476 sq mi (73,753 sq km), off S South America, separated from the mainland by the Strait of Magellan. , and the birds forage in habitats as diverse as tropical lowlands and 4,500-meter-high slopes of the Andes.

Despite the previous absence of evidence and the lack of current hummingbird inhabitants
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, some scientists had suggested that hummingbirds once populated the Old World. Several species of plants there, especially in parts of eastern Africa and the Himalayas, sport flowers that appear to be adapted to hovering avian pollinators.

Mayr's find has "fascinating implications," says Ethan J. Temeles, an evolutionary ecologist at Amherst (Mass.) College. For instance, he notes, the shape of those enigmatic Old World blossoms--which are now pollinated by appropriately equipped insects, such as long-tongued bees--may originally have evolved to match the bill shape of ancient hummingbirds.
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Title Annotation:Ancient Buzzing
Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Date:May 8, 2004
Words:396
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