கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Stay updated with breaking news from கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக். Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Top News In கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக் Today - Breaking & Trending Today

Very Rare Fossil Revealed One Creature Eating Another That Was Eating Another


A very rare fossil showed three different creatures in the middle of eating. This unique fossil from the early part of the Jurassic Period showed that a large marine creature (perhaps a shark) bit down on a squid-like creature that was already in the middle of feasting on a crustacean.
While the largest predator lived, the crustacean and the squid-like creature (called a belemnite) weren’t as lucky as their 180-million-year-old remains ended up at the bottom of a German sea. The remains were found in a small quarry that is located close to the town of Holzmaden in the southwestern part of Germany. ....

Baden Wüberg , Christian Klug , University Of Zurich Palaeontological Museum , Palaeontological Institute , Jurassic Period , Palaeontological Museum , Live Science , Swiss Journal , கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக் , ஜுராசிக் காலம் , வாழ அறிவியல் , சுவிஸ் இதழ் ,

A squid eating a lobster got eaten by a shark, and it was fossilized in action


Evidence for how predators hunted in ancient seas is not easy to come by. Paleontologist Christian Klug, a professor at the University of Zurich’s Paleontological Institute who is also curator of the University of Zurich’s Paleontological Museum, knew that predation frozen in time like this was something to sink your teeth into, even if evidence for who the largest predator was remains indirect.
How the belemnite and its prey were fossilized forever in death. Credit: Christian Klug et al. Swiss J Palaeontol
“It is remarkable that leftovers are actually interesting sources of palaeobiological knowledge,” Klug, who led a study recently published in ....

Christian Klug , University Of Zurich Paleontological Museum , University Of Zurich Paleontological Institute , Paleontological Institute , Paleontological Museum , Swiss Journal , கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் ஸுரி பழங்காலவியல் நிறுவனம் , பழங்காலவியல் நிறுவனம் , பழங்காலவியல் அருங்காட்சியகம் , சுவிஸ் இதழ் ,

Epic Jurassic Era Fossil Shows a Predator in Action Being Preyed Upon


Pabulite Kill Leftover Evidence and the Food Chain
The focus on the  food chain  is not just because the predator got preyed upon, but also because of another potential evolutionary facet.
All cephalopods, in general, have tough rostra or beaks that are hard, pointed and difficult to digest. Fossils from the same period of marine crocodiles and predatory fish, and their stomachs, point to the fact that they were not discerning eaters, gobbling everything down, even the hard beaks.
This has been gauged from the remains of a  fossilized shark  (another 
Hybodus hauffianus ), from the early Jurassic, also found in Germany. It had a stomach full of undigested belemnite beaks, which likely caused its premature and untimely death. ....

Baden Wüberg , Christian Klug , Dieter Weber , Gunter Schweigert , Staatliches Museum , University Of Zurich Palaeontological Museum , Museum Of Natural History Stuttgart , Palaeontological Museum , Swiss Journal , Live Science , Jurassic Era Fossil , Early Jurassic , Kill Leftover Evidence , Food Chain , Fossilized History , German Stone Quarry , State Museum , Natural History Stuttgart , Food Chain , கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக் , டயட்டர் வெபர் , அருங்காட்சியகம் ஆஃப் இயற்கை வரலாறு ஸ்டட்கர்ட் , சுவிஸ் இதழ் , வாழ அறிவியல் , ஆரம்ப ஜுராசிக் , உணவு சங்கிலி ,

180-million-year-old fossil tells tale of an ancient shark eating a squid that's eating a crustacean


180-million-year-old fossil tells tale of an ancient shark eating a squid that’s eating a crustacean
Updated May 11, 2021;
Posted May 11, 2021
A fossil from the Jurassic period tells the tale of a shark who ate a squid as the squid was eating a crustacean. (photo by Kris D souza via Unsplash)
Facebook Share
Researchers have discovered a fossil depicting an ancient crustacean getting eaten by an ancient squid who, in turn, was partially eaten by an ancient shark.
Estimated to be approximately 180 million years old, the fossil was discovered in a quarry in Germany and is currently be used to find out more about earlier species. ....

Christian Klug , University Of Zurich Paleontological Museum , Paleontological Institute , Swiss Journal , Paleontological Museum , கிறிஸ்துவர் க்லக் , பழங்காலவியல் நிறுவனம் , சுவிஸ் இதழ் , பழங்காலவியல் அருங்காட்சியகம் ,