Saturday, October 19, 2024

Miguasha National Park in Quebec-A Science Lesson

 Hi everyone. Happy weekend. It's going to be a beautiful one (at least that's what the weather people are saying) in my area. I hope to get outside a lot and maybe finish a few chores too.👍

Just a warning-this is a LONG post.

     Back in Monday's post (when I talked about part 2 of my recent trip to Quebec), I mentioned a park we visited that had lots of fish fossils. I didn't include it in Monday's post because I wanted to tell you a bit about the park. Miguasha tells an important chapter in the story of the evolution of life.

     Miguasha National Park is also World Heritage Site. In the park is a cliff where a lot of fish fossils have been found. Not just any fish fossils, but fossils from the "Age of Fish" in the Devonian Period. This time period came long before there were even dinosaurs, because during the Devonian period the only animals to  inhabit dry land were insects. Fish would have been the only vertebrate or back-boned animals to be alive, because fish were the first vertebrates to evolve. The world had yet to see amphibians, reptiles, birds or mammals. 

     In the Devonian the world was a very different looking place. Notice how much of Europe and North America (which were combined at this point and very much under water) were south of the Equator.


     For those of you who like dates, the Devonian was 419.2 until 358.9 MILLION years ago. And just to give you a comparison to when classic dinosaurs roamed the Earth, those reptiles lived 252 until 66 million years ago. It would be over a million years after the Devonian ended before there were any dinosaurs. I only use dinosaurs as my reference point because most everyone seems to have heard of them. 

     I find it very very hard to  imagine how much time a million years is, especially since our human time frame is so short. The end of the Ancient Egyptian era (Cleopatra's death) in 30 BCE  was only a little over 2050 years ago. To me the Ancient Egyptian times seem like a very long time ago, so it is hard to comprehend  how much time has passed and how many changes have happened  since 419 million years ago. 

    During the Devonian there were all types of things living in the oceans including many fish we wouldn't recognize today.






     However, at the very end of the Devonian Era, vertebrate life appeared on land. According to what the fossil record has shown us, the first vertebrate life on land would (most likely) have been some kind of amphibian. Modern amphibians include frogs, toads, salamanders and newts. For a long time scientists have been looking for missing link fossils, those long extinct animals that made the trip onto land and had the traits needed to stay and live on land. In other words, they've wanted to find fossils of animals who were no longer typical fish and could have lead to the evolution of amphibians.


   Here's a photo of a frog I took earlier this summer. What makes a frog different from a fish? For the sake of brevity and since this is a  blog post not a journal article, I'm going to go very very basic here. Fish have scales, and frogs do not. Fish have fins, and frogs have legs. Fish have gills, and frogs have lungs.  For amphibians to appear on land, some types of fish would have had to get rid of their scales, lose their gills, develop lungs, lose their fins and actually grow legs.

   All of these are huge changes and would have taken many many many generations to happen. 

   And once again, for the sake of brevity since this is a blog post, I'm going to focus on legs.

  Think about how a fin needs to change into a leg. I found this diagram online in an article in the scientific journal Science. (https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abc3510) You don't need to be an expert nor have to look at it carefully to see what I mean by a fin turning into a leg.




     The fin on the left is a typical fish fin. The fin in the middle is from a fish we call the Coelacanth and then finally there's the leg on a mouse. Notice the typical fish does not have any bones in its fin that relate to frog or human arm bones. The Coelacanth has tiny bones. And in some missing link(s) those bones would have evolved into the arm bones we (including mice) all have: the red humerus, the purple radius and the blue ulna. 

  

       And in case you're wondering what a Coelacanth is, here's a photo of a model of one. Notice the fins. It's really clear if you look right behind the head that the side (pectoral) fin has a little arm-like structure before the actual fin. However, the Coelacanth still has the same number and position of fins that typical fish do.

   And here's a coelocanth like fish fossils that is in the museum at the park.


         Now back to the park. Miguasha is the site where not only lots of Devonian organisms have been found, but also, some of a very special fish. There is a partial skeleton referred to as the prince of Miguasha which is a fish with arm bones like the coelocanth has. But an even more important  complete fossilized skeleton was found in 2010 and is referred to as "le roi des poissons" or the king of the fish. 




    Here is a model of this king of the fish. What makes him so special? First notice how many fins he has. He has 2 in the front and then 2 in the back. 

   Think of a frog. They have 2 legs in the front and then 2 legs in the back. Notice also how the eyes are on top of the head more like a frog than on the sides of the head more like a fish. And I don't see any gill openings or a gill cover along the side of the head. I'm not certain about this last point I bring up,  but  the 2 slits behind the eyes could be for breathing in air. 

   From what ichthyologists now know since finding this complete skeleton in 2010, this fish is the  closest missing link to  the connection that shows that fish evolved into amphibians. 



       This find is still being researched, so this fossilized skeleton still has a lot to show us.

    The king of the fish in this above model is named  Elpistostege watsonii.  But there are 2 other important fish fossils found at Miguasha besides the prince and the king.  One of those 2 fish is 
Miguashaia bureaui which is similar to modern day coelocanths, and the other fish is Scaumenacia curta which has both gills and lungs.

      Considering how rare it is for something to actually become a fossil (since most living things would completely decay), and considering how many important fossils were found here, this is a pretty special place. I was actually surprised how small the actual fossil site was also.



      Having a degree in biology and having worked in fishery research during my undergrad years, I found this place fascinating. I hope I didn't bore you too much with this post, but I assume that if I did, you would have moved on before you got to this point. 😏

     FYI-I don't know why my font changed towards the end of the post, it's not that way in my post before I posted it. Hmmmmm.  That's stranger than the fish in this post. 

     Have a great rest of your weekend.

     


       





    
     








    



15 comments:

David M. Gascoigne, said...

I read every word with great appreciation, Erika, and I appreciate the coverage of both the topic and of Miguasha National Park. I hope that others will be motivated to visit the park and to learn more about the origins of life on Earth. With luck they will then continue to learn and thereby understand more deeply how much we are threatening the future of life as we know it as we move deeper into the Anthropocene. Great job! Well done! Thank you! All the best - David

Valerie-Jael said...

Hi Erika, this is a wonderful and knowledgeable post, I loved reading it. Thanks so much for all of the explanations. The Miguasha Park is a place I would like to visit. I wish I could have gone with you and heard all of the explanations from you! Thanks again for an admirable post! Hugs, Valerie

kathyinozarks said...

I learned a lot and enjoyed your post very much. this would have been a fascinating place to visit-thanks for sharing hugs

Angie's Recipes said...

The fish fossils are fascinating. I didn't know that frogs have lungs. This is a very educational and interesting post. Thank you, Erika.

CJ Kennedy said...

Very interesting post. I didn't know about the arrangement of the continents. I thought they were all stuck together like puzzle pieces and called Pangea. But it makes sense now to think that there was a before because things took so long to change. Enjoy the gorgeous weather coming up

Iris Flavia said...

We are an old place (we should preserve!). Mother Nature sure is a magician!
And no, that was not boring at all!
DESPITE my biology-teacher was the most boring man in the world.
Though ... well. Math. "You stretch our your arm, put up your thumb and it covers a tank. How far away is the tank?"
Girls, btw way, are too dumb for math anyways ("I am a graduated engineer" I would like to yell in his face).
My font is always changed by blogger and I have to correct it to my liking.... Have a great weekend and kick blogger a bit, hugs

Tom said...

...these are gorgeous, as a kid I would find small fossils.

Jim and Barb's Adventures said...

It is just mind boggling that many millions of years ago. We live in "today" so much that most of us can only process what happened in the last generation or two never considering that we humans are just a blip on the overall history of earth.

*Vicki* said...

Those fossils have always fascinated me and the things that have been found underwater from so long ago! They have found some very strange things for sure! How wonderful to have gone to the park to see these amazing displays! Thanks for sharing!

Christine said...

Interesting photos

Lowcarb team member said...

So interesting and so fascinating.
A great post, thank you.

All the best Jan

Aimeslee Winans said...

I know you had a wonderful time there to be sure! Now, if you could tell me how one male and one female turtle who climbed into our swimming pool during Hurricane Harvey in 2017 (Honey had to pump the water down twice during it plus once afterwards so there was no chlorine left in it as Harvey was a torrential rain event) have managed to live there happily ever since, even making two babies (who we think then made two more babies -- yes, incest but I've read they do that when in captivity). The pool does have a sun shelf and they do get out of the water to sun every day. We never cleaned the pool after Harvey because we found them in it, so it's yucky wetlands, baby! But they had to have crawled into our yard from the field in back of us, so could they have adapted to become someting like sea turtles???? It's quite strange but they are Honey's "pets". He feeds them and they are quite healthy. xox

Lisca said...

I found it absolutely fascinating! And thank you for explaining things so clearly (you are a teacher after all) asit was very much appreciated. I have a degree in geology and have learnt about these things, but this was years ago and they have discovered so many things recently (2010 is recent). The missing link is fascinating and makes sense. How amazing! Thank you so much!
Hugs,
Lisca

Let's Art Journal said...

Such an interesting place to visit, it was fascinating to learn about the fish and see the fossils 😊. I'm always amazed how they can be so preserved in the rocks. It looks like you had a wonderful time on your travels. Hugs, Jo x

Neet said...

In no way was this boring. In fact it held me right through partly because of my fascination with fossils but also because of the depth of knowledge you have. I will probably go back and read it again, sharing with hubbie this time as I am sure he will filnd it fascinating also. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and interest with us, it must be fascinating to visit somewhere like this and especially with someone like you.
Hugs, Neet xx