Looking millions of years back with neutrons: the hearing of the Kawingasaurus fossilis

A study with neutrons suggests the K. fossilis could hear through bone conduction and seismic vibration.

, Information Manager, 28/10/2014

Kawingasaurus Kawingasaurus Fossil of Kawingasaurus at Paleontological Museum in Tübingen. (C) Ghedoghedo from Wiki Commons

Fossil of Kawingasaurus. © Ghedoghedo, Wikipedia

Let’s travel back in time and imagine how life on earth was before the biggest mass extinction on Earth, about 252 million years ago. The Kawingasaurus fossilis was a small herbivorous living in the Late Permian period. By using neutrons, a scientist investigated the mechanisms through which the K. fossilis could hear.

Nowack found the fossils of this species in Tanzania in 1936. They now belong to the Paleontological Museum in Tübingen, Germany, making it one of the most important and complete collections worldwide. Thanks to the NMI3 Access Programme , Michael Laaß from the Ruprecht-Karls-University of Heidelberg in Germany could conduct experiments at the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland to analyse the fossils. Neutron tomography and 3D visualisation made it possible to look at the internal cranial anatomy of the K. fossilis and infer on its hearing.

The skull of K. fossilis The skull of K. fossilis The skull of K. fossilis (GPIT/RE/9272) from the Tübingen collection. Left: Photo. Right: 3D-reconstruction of the skull on the basis of neutron tomographic data. (courtesy of the author)

Left: photo of K. fossilis skull; Right: 3D-reconstruction on the basis of neutron tomographic data (courtesy of the author)

The investigation revealed that the K. fossilis had much bigger inner ears than any other mammal (except from the Lambdopsalis from the Cretaceous). Even though the K. fossilis had only a skull length of circa 40mm, which is less than a third of the human skull, the ear vestibule had a volume about 25 times larger than that of humans.

Such extraordinary dimensions suggest that the K. fossilis could hear mainly through bone conduction and seismic sensitivity. Bone conduction is the process that conducts the sound to the inner ear through the skull. This is how we hear ourselves speaking and also how we listen to music with some types of headsets.

quote

The animal had a fused triangular head with a snout shaped like a spatula, probably used for digging. This feature also enhanced seismic signal detection, which is how a number of animals sense information such as warnings about predators, courtship or group maintenance, through seismic vibrations of the ground or other substrate. Once perceived, seismic vibrations are then transmitted by bone conduction to the inner ear.

This work makes us go back in time and imagine how these species behaved.

Original publication

Laaß, M. (2014), Bone-conduction hearing and seismic sensitivity of the late permian anomodont Kawingasaurus fossilis. J. Morphol.. doi: 10.1002/jmor.20325

Laaß has received NMI3 support to conduct experiments at PSI.

NMI3 thanks Michael Laaß for reviewing this article.

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