Home MarkTechPost Solving the mystery of how an ancient bird went extinct
MarkTechPost

Solving the mystery of how an ancient bird went extinct

Share
Solving the mystery of how an ancient bird went extinct
Share


AI provides a new tool for studying extinct species from 50,000 years ago

Researchers Beatrice Demarchi from the University of Turin, Josefin Stiller from the University of Copenhagen, and Matthew Collins from the University of Cambridge and University of Copenhagen share their AlphaFold story.

Could burn marks on ancient eggshells explain the disappearance of the giant flightless bird Genyornis newtoni? This ostrich-sized “thunderbird”, dubbed “the demon-duck of doom” for its huge head, disappeared from Australia’s fossil record about 50,000 years ago. The discovery of burned eggshells led scientists, including a team of scientists led by Gifford Miller at the University of Colorado Boulder, to propose that their extinction was caused by early humans eating their eggs.

But the evidence was not clear cut. The burned eggshells seemed too thin to come from such a large bird. Were they not from something much smaller, more the size of a large turkey?

To determine whether Genyornis became extinct through human intervention, scientists needed to prove that the burnt shell fragments were indeed from eggs laid by Genyornis. That led to a new problem. The DNA in these eggshells had perished during their 50,000 years in the hot sands of the Australian desert. The researchers turned instead to proteins and artificial intelligence to help fill in the gaps.

It took a genuinely multidisciplinary team including specialists in the proteins in ancient fossils , bird genetics, archaeology and more to crack the eggshell code and find out what led to the demise of the thunderbird. Spoiler alert: the evidence suggests these evidently tasty large eggs were indeed those of Genyornis.

Read the full paper by Beatrice, Josefin, Matthew and colleagues in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.



Source link

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails and alerts from: techaireports.com. You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the Unsubscribe link, found at the bottom of every email.

Latest Posts

Related Articles
2.0 Flash, Flash-Lite, Pro Experimental
MarkTechPost

2.0 Flash, Flash-Lite, Pro Experimental

In December, we kicked off the agentic era by releasing an experimental...

Updating the Frontier Safety Framework
MarkTechPost

Updating the Frontier Safety Framework

Our next iteration of the FSF sets out stronger security protocols on...

FACTS Grounding: A new benchmark for evaluating the factuality of large language models
MarkTechPost

FACTS Grounding: A new benchmark for evaluating the factuality of large language models

Responsibility & Safety Published 17 December 2024 Authors FACTS team Our comprehensive...

Updates to Veo, Imagen and VideoFX, plus introducing Whisk in Google Labs
MarkTechPost

Updates to Veo, Imagen and VideoFX, plus introducing Whisk in Google Labs

While video models often “hallucinate” unwanted details — extra fingers or unexpected...