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01/22/2025 10:18

Fossil discovery in the Geiseltal Collection: researchers identify unique bird skull

Tom Leonhardt Stabsstelle Zentrale Kommunikation
Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg

    Around 45 million years ago, a 4.6 feet-tall (1.40 metres) flightless bird called Diatryma roamed the Geiseltal region in southern Saxony-Anhalt. An international team of researchers led the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) and the Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum in Frankfurt report on the bird's fully preserved skull in the scientific journal "Palaeontologia Electronica". The fossil was unearthed in the 1950s in a former lignite mining area in the Geiseltal in Germany. It was initially misclassified and thus led a shadowy existence until its rediscovery. The only other place that a similar skull fossil has been found is the USA.

    The Geiseltal Saxony-Anhalt is located south-west of Halle and was a lignite mining area until 1993. Numerous exceptionally well-preserved animal fossils have been unearthed here. The Geiseltal Collection at MLU comprises 50,000 fossils and is considered a national heritage asset. These fossils offer unique insights into the evolution of animals and the Eocene Epoch around 45 million years ago. At that time, the Geiseltal was a warm, tropical swamp. Ancient horses, early tapirs, large land crocodiles as well as giant tortoises, lizards and numerous birds lived here. Some of the latter were flightless and the largest of these was Diatryma, a herbivore with a gigantic beak which stood around 4.6 feet high.

    For many years no one knew that an almost completely preserved skull of Diatryma was part of the collection. "The find was initially misidentified as a crocodile skull," says Michael Stache, a geological preparator at MLU’s Central Repository of Natural Science Collections. Stache came across the fossil again by chance several years ago. He realised the mistake and got down to work, restoring and then analysing the piece of skull. He combined the fossil with another object from the collection, reconstructing an almost entire skull. Dr Gerald Mayr, a researcher at the Senckenberg Institute, examined the find more closely and realised its importance: the skull clearly belonged to a Diatryma. Only one other fully preserved skull is known to exist in the world and is housed in the American Museum of Natural History in the USA.

    "This shows once again that many of the most interesting discoveries in palaeontology occur in museum collections. Just a few years ago, nobody would have thought that the Geiseltal Collection would contain such surprises," says Gerald Mayr. Michael Stache also reports that there is great scientific interest in the fossils. Researchers from Germany and abroad come to MLU on a regular basis to investigate the objects. "This research expands our understanding of the Eocene Epoch in the Geiseltal even though the excavations were completed long ago," says Michael Stache. Up until ten years ago, for example, it was assumed that Diatryma hunted prehistoric horses in the Geiseltal. More recent investigations have found that the bird was, in fact, a herbivore.

    There are around 40 specimens of the bird in the Geiseltal Collection. "Diatryma was probably a rare guest in the Geisetal. Otherwise, there would probably be more fossils," concludes Stache.


    Original publication:

    Study: Mayr G, Mourer-Chauviré C, Bourdon E, and Stache M. Resurrecting the taxon Diatryma: A review of the giant flightless Eocene Gastornithiformes (Aves), with a report of the first skull of Diatryma. Palaeontologia Electronica (2024). doi: 10.26879/1438
    https://doi.org/10.26879/1438


    Images

    Reconstruction of the complete skeleton of a Diatryma
    Reconstruction of the complete skeleton of a Diatryma

    Uni Halle / Markus Scholz

    The almost complete skull fossil can be found in the Geiseltal Collection.
    The almost complete skull fossil can be found in the Geiseltal Collection.

    Uni Halle / Michael Stache


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, all interested persons
    Biology, Geosciences, Zoology / agricultural and forest sciences
    transregional, national
    Research results
    English


     

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