English: Size of the pakicetid
Pakicetus, compared to a human. Brown silhouette shows
Pakicetus as a terrestrial, dog-like animal is based on skeletal drawing (which in turn is a composite of different specimens published by Thewissen
et.al. (2001)).
[1] Green silhouette outlines an alternative restoration by John Klausmeyer (University of Michigan Exhibit Museum) of
Pakicetus as an aquatic, swimming animal (measuring about 1.4 meters long).
[2][3]
When Pakicetus became known to science in the early 1980s, the only known remains consisted of fragments of a skull (GSP-UM 084) and a jaw fragment with some teeth (GSP-UM 081). [4] From these remains, Pakicetus was reconstructed and suggested to represent an “amphibious stage” in whale evolution that “may still spent a significant amount of time on land”. [5] In 2001, Thewissen et.al. published additional bones referred to Pakicetus and concluded that it was a terrestrial animal.[1]
Philip Gingerich have repeatedly claimed the reconstruction of Pakicetus as a terrestrial animal to be “controversial”.[2]He points out that the conclusion by Thewissen et.al. that Pakicetus was terrestrial is “based on isolated bones found in a quarry where pakicetid and land mammal bones are mixed together–circumstances unlikely to convince many skeptics”[6] and argue it was made “with little explanation”.[2] Gingerich have defended his original depiction of Pakicetus as a semiaquatic animal, based the aquatic adaptations he originally described, [6] and subsequently[2] on the basis of its hearing mechanism,[7] the ilium, [8] bone microstructure[9] and long toe bones (indicating webbed feet for swimming).[2] Gingerich have repeatedly favoured the depiction by John Klausmeyer. [2][6][3]
Sources
- ↑ a b Thewissen J.G.M., Williams E.M., Roe L.J. & Hussain S.T. (2001). "Skeletons of terrestrial cetaeans and the relationship of whales to artiodactyls", Nature 413(6853): p. 277-281. DOI: 10.1038/35095005
- ↑ a b c d e f Gingerich P.D. 2012, “Evolution of Whales from Land to Sea”, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 156(3): p. 309-323
- ↑ a b Gingerich P.D. (2015). “Evolution of Whales from Land to Sea”, in Dial K.P., Shubin N & Brainerd E.L. (eds.). Great Transformations in Vertebrate Evolution (University of Chicago Press), p. 239-256
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ [2]
- ↑ a b c [3]
- ↑ [4]
- ↑ [5]
- ↑ [176:TPSOEE2.0.CO;2.short]