Fish Fossil Offers Earliest Example of Teeth

Fish Fossil Offers Fish Had Teeth

Fish Fossil Offers Earliest Example of Teeth

LEIDEN, Netherlands, June 24 (UPI) — Many scientists have suggested all teeth, regardless of species, originated from scales. Now, there’s solid evidence.

Paleontologist Martin Rucklin, a researcher at the Netherland’s Naturalis Biodiversity Center, found the evidence in the collections of the natural history museum in Stockholm, Sweden — a 410 million-year-old fragment of a primitive fish fossil.

Models of the tooth fragment helped illustrate its potential evolutionary path. Photo by Naturalis/Martin

With the help of Phil Donoghue of the University of Bristol, Martin was able to examine the internal structure of the fragment using blasts of high-energy X-rays. The imaging technology revealed the fragment to be an early tooth plate.

Researchers say it’s the earliest example of teeth, and were also able to show the tissue likeness between scale and tooth. The new research also shows that teeth were present in the absence of jaw bones, suggesting the two features evolved separately.

Using their internal images — including shots taken from every conceivable angle — Martin and Donoghue built computer models to visualize how how the teeth might have evolved.

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