The Evolution of Whales: Geology 331
The Evolution of Whales: Geology 331
The Evolution of Whales: Geology 331
Geology 331
Whales
Prothero, 2007
Evolution of
Whales
1990s
Evolution of
Whales
2000s
Prothero, 2007
Archaeocetes
The two major groups of living
whales: Mysticetes (baleen) and
Odontocetes (toothed)
Blue
Whale,
Humpback
Whale,
Sperm
Whale,
and Killer
Whale
Whale
baleen
Tertiary Outcrops Yielding Fossil
Whales in Asia
Closing of
the Tethys
Sea during
the Cenozoic
Indohyus: 48 MY old
Pakicetus: 50 MY old
Ambulocetus: 49 MY old
Basilosaurus: 37 MY old
Dorudon: 35 MY old
Pakicetus:
50 MY old
Size comparison with
a modern coyote skull
Ambulocetus: 49 MY old
Ambulocetus in action
Reconstruction of the fossil whale Ambulocetus from the
Eocene of Pakistan (~ 49 million years ago). Ambulocetus
was discovered in 1994. In this artists reconstruction,
Ambulocetus is shown living like a crocodile, hunting land
mammals near the shore.
Rodhocetus:
46 MY old
The ankle bones of Rodhocetus
are more similar to artiodactyls
(even-toed ungulates) than the
traditional mesonychian ancestor.
Ocean Hall, Smithsonian Institution
Kutchicetus: 45 MY old
5
2
3
1
4 15 MY of
evolution during
the Eocene
Evolutionary Order: 1, Pakicetus; 2, Ambulocetus;
3, Rodhocetus; 4, Kutchicetus; 5, Dorudon
Basilosaurus: 37 MY old
Prothero, 2007
Phylogeny of Cetacea showing a common ancestry shared with Artiodactyla, and the hypothesized evolutionary origin of both
from older Paleocene age Condylarthra. Horizontal axis is arbitrary, while the vertical axis is geological time. Our 2000
discovery of distinctively artiodactyl-like double-pulley astragalus bones in articulated skeletons of early archaeocetes is the
principal evidence linking whales and artiodactyls as shown here (see Gingerich et al., 2001). The evolutionary origin of both
whales and artiodactyls is closely tied to the Paleocene-Eocene boundary, and the transition from archaeocetes to modern
whales is related to climatic and ocean circulation changes at the Eocene-Oligocene boundary. Source: University of Michigan
Museum of Paleontology.
Evidence for
the
evolutionary
link between
cetaceans
and
artiodactyls