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Home Science & Technology Science

Student discovers ancestor of modern long-horned grasshopper fossil in China

byCustoms Today Report
30/10/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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BEIJING: A student has discovered a 120 million-year-old fossil that belonged to an ancestor of the modern long-horned grasshopper, the media reported on Thursday.

The fossil, found in Yumen in Gansu province, preserved a 3-centimetre section of the ancient insect’s wing, China.org reported.

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“Most insects only have their wings preserved in the fossils,” said Wang He, student at the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, who unearthed the fossil, “their bodies, unlike the wings, were easily decomposed or eaten by other creatures”.

“Judging from the wing, the strata where the fossil was found and the nearby associated fossils, we can be sure that the insect was the ancestor of the modern katydid,” said Wang, who is doing post-graduate work at the institute.

The structure of the wing indicates the ancient insect could sing like the modern ones, though the modern katydid has weaker wings and reproductive organs than its ancestor, Wang said.

Zhang Haichun, a paleontology professor at the institute, said fossils of the orthopteran family Prophalangopsidae have only been found in other parts of China and other regions of the world.

“Such insects have not been found in Gansu province before,” Zhang said, adding “It indicates that the province, which is dry now, used to be humid and full of water systems, because the insects need to grow in a humid environment.”

He said the insects lived in the Cretaceous Period, when the world’s earliest flowers began to appear, and they ate flowers and plant leaves.

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