Ancient pig-like animal shows beginnings of mammalian brain evolution
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[June 22, 2024]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - More than 250 million years ago, Scotland was not veiled in
mist and rain, as it often is today, but rather a desert blanketed in
sand dunes. One of the denizens of this challenging landscape was a
squat, vaguely pig-like mammal forerunner named Gordonia, with a pug
face and two tusks protruding from beaked jaws.
Using high-resolution, three-dimensional imaging on a fossil of this
Permian Period creature, researchers have been able to see its brain
cavity and make a digital replica of the brain, providing insight into
the size and composition of this crucial organ at an early stage in
mammalian evolution.
To be clear, Gordonia's brain was a far cry from that of a modern
mammal. But the relative size of its brain compared to its body seemed
to presage the intelligence that later helped mammals - including people
- dominate Earth.
Gordonia, which lived about 254-252 million years ago, was a type of
animal called a protomammal - a predecessor of mammals that still
retained traits of reptilian ancestors.
"Overall, Gordonia's brain looks more like a reptile than a mammal
despite it being more closely related to us than to any modern living
reptile," said paleontology doctoral student Hady George of the
University of Bristol, lead author of the study published this week in
the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
The front of Gordonia's brain - the forebrain - is proportionally much
smaller than that of any mammal, George said. While Gordonia's brain is
generally typical for an ancient mammal relative, an organ called the
pineal body, dedicated to metabolic functions, was very enlarged, George
added.
But there appear to be some early glimmers of what was to come.
"What we see is a brain that looks very different from ours, not a big
balloon-like orb, but more of a long, arched tube. But even though its
shape looks odd, when we measure its volume we can see that it was
pretty big compared to the size of the body," said University of
Edinburgh paleontologist and study senior author Steve Brusatte.
"It's so hard to measure intelligence in modern-day animals, and even
more so with long-extinct species that we can never observe directly.
But we can at least say generally that it would have been a smart
creature for its time. In the increasing size of its brain relative to
other animals of the time, we can sense the early evolutionary roots of
our own enormous brains," Brusatte added.
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A recreation of the skull of the tusked and pig-like Permian Period
creature Gordonia, a forerunner of mammals, based on CT scans of its
fossil is seen in this image released by the University of
Edinburgh. George et al., 2024, Zoological Journal of the Linnean
Society/Handout via REUTERS
Gordonia was about three feet (one meter) long and weighed
approximately 45 pounds. Its head was tall and wide. While it had a
squat and pig-like build, its legs were not as long as those of a
pig.
"The beak and tusks combination facilitated a herbivorous lifestyle,
and especially plucking juicy roots out of the desert it made home,"
George said.
It was a type of protomammal called a dicynodont, which first
appeared around 265 million years ago and went extinct around 200
million years ago. As a group, dicynodonts survived the worst mass
extinction in Earth's history 252 million years ago at the end of
the Permian - thought to have been caused by immense volcanic
activity in Siberia - though Gordonia did not.
It was in the aftermath of that calamity that the first dinosaurs
appeared about 230 million years ago. Mammals subsequently appeared
about 210 million years ago, when they scurried around under the
feet of the dinosaurs. Only after an asteroid strike 66 million
years ago wiped out the competition did the mammals got their chance
to dominate.
Discovered in 1997, the Gordonia fossil is a sandstone block
containing a void perfectly capturing the skull and lower jaw.
"The brain of Gordonia resembles modern mammal brains very little,
and does not possess any of the unique features that characterize
mammalian brains. This highlights how much more the brain had to
change to become one we would recognize today as a true mammal,"
George said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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