Permian
Lagerstatte
In the hills of Kansas exists an ancient fossilized seasonal
pond from the Permian period, approximately 280 million years
old. At a time before dinosaurs, mammals, or birds even existed,
the Permian ecosystem was quite an alien place. The first
firm foothold of land animals occurred in the Permian, an
extension of the critical transition from water vertebrates
– fish and amphibians – to terrestrial creatures.
Unfortunately, North American Lower Permian sites are not
as common as scientists would like and Permian sites in Kansas
that contain vertebrate remains are exceedingly rare. The
Permian research site, examined by both University of Kansas
and Palm Beach Museum personnel, contains a dense assemblage
of primitive lobe-finned fish such as the lungfish Gnathorhiza
and osteolepiform fish, and amphibians such as lysorophids
and labyrinthodonts. Perhaps two new species exist at the
site and even more may be discovered in the future. Some projects
centering on the Permian locality are as follows:
Reconstruction
of the lungfish Gnathorhiza
Although fossil lungfish have been documented before, very
few three dimensional reconstructions have been made. Fossil
material from the Permian locality have been painstakingly
prepared, stabilized, molded, and used to produce the first
complete, three dimensional Gnathorhiza skeletal reconstruction.
Reconstruction of the labyrinthodont Acroplous
In a similar fashion to the lungfish reconstruction, exceptionally
well preserved remains of the primitive amphibian Acroplous
were prepared and the first complete, three dimensional reconstruction
of the creature is currently underway.
Reconstruction
of the Lysorophid
Bones
of a lysorophid amphibian, a long ribbon-like creature, were
uncovered at the Permian locality and the bones are currently
being prepared and restored so that a three dimensional reconstruction
can be fabricated.
Burrowing
labyrinthodonts
Although
suspected for some time, it was never demonstrated that the
labyrinthodont Acroplous produced burrows. Robert’s
discovery of a complete skeleton preserved within a fossilized
burrow provides compelling evidence for the first time that
Acroplous did, indeed, produce burrows.
New species of transitional amphibian
While
studying the vertebrate remains at the Permian locality, Robert
discovered what appeared to be a combination of a labyrinthodont
amphibian and a fish. The creature, whose body resembled a
typical labyrinthodont in most respects, had scales resembling
those of a lungfish and fins instead of arms and legs. The
creature, representing a transitional form between aquatic
and terrestrial organisms, is new to science and is currently
being investigated.
Detailed
paleoecological reconstruction
The Permian locality contains a plethora of vertebrate and
geological clues needed to reconstruct the paleoecology and
depositional history of the site. Over time, a detailed study
shall piece together the site’s depositional history
and elucidate the climate of the Lower Permian.