Old Fourlegs Revisited

By Carl Zimmer
Jul 23, 2007 10:01 PMMay 21, 2019 6:00 PM
coelacanth.jpg

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Last week the world press took note of a fish hauled up off the coast of Zanzibar. (AP, Reuters). Why did they care? Because the animal was one of the most celebrated fish of the sea: it was a coelacanth.

The coelacanth is an ugly, bucket-mouthed creature. At first scientists only knew it from its fossils, the youngest of which was 70 million years old. In 1938, however, a flesh-and-blood coelacanth was dredged up near East London, South Africa. The five-foot long beast had many of the hallmarks of fossil coelacanths, such as hollow spines in their vertebrae, peculiar lobe-shaped fins, and a joint dividing its eye and "nose" from its brain and ears. The coelacanth became a celebrity in the, hailed as a "living fossil."

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