πŸ³πŸ‹ The World's First Whale πŸ‹πŸ³

A few days ago I wrote about evolution and how it works over the millennia, often abandoning certain traits only to revisit them later on when the proper circumstances arise.

Like for example sea mammals that evolved from land mammals that evolved from an ancestor that originally lived in the sea!

So today I'd like to talk a bit about the first whale, which on the outside looked more like a wolf/rodent thing! And unlike modern whales it was more amphibious in nature.

Meet the Pakicetus, the world's earliest known whale:

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source

Of course the species no longer exists, for at least the last 50 millions. It was about 1 metre (3 ft 3 in) to 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) long and is widely regarded as the most basal whale.

Essentially a transitional stage from land to sea, the creature was found in Pakistan, hence the genus name, paki for Pakistan and cetus for whale.

Although it had mostly the body of a land mammal, it was well-adapted to life near water, featuring long legs and webbed feet, capable of both walking and swimming.

Despite its looks, it did have dumb characteristics found in modern whales, although less pronounced, including a large auditory bulla (a bone in the ear) and an enlongated skull.

The discovery of the animal in the 1980s was a major breakthrough as it provided concrete evidence that whales evolved from land-dwelling ancestors.

Here's a link to Wikipedia if you would like to learn more about them. And here's a video on them by the e Smithsonian institute

Ok, I think I will conclude today's post with this quick dumb yet hilarious video. It sums up everything in a kinda.. unique way lol

Posted Using InLeo Alpha



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23 comments
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Fascinating how natural selection works, and evolution happens a lot faster than one would think. In the grand scheme of things fifty million years is the blink of an eye in the history of the earth...

I wonder what we will have evolved into in fifty million years, assuming we don't nuke each other into dust in the next year or so...
!PIMP

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Chances are we will be extinct along with a good chunk of the current life. Go humans!

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At the rate we're going I agree, unless we survive long enough for humans to colonize other planets and star systems. Otherwise we'll be toast just like most other life...
!PIMP

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Essentially a transitional stage from land to sea, the creature was found in Pakistan

Never heard about this whale fact before even tho I live here... Not even in schools LoL.

Have to admit whales evolution is finest one, also the size and features it is fascinating.

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Nice that you learned!! It is amazing how it was transitioned to the waters! and the proof is that you still can find a bone that could be the remaining of the back legs of this animals in whales

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I think this is a famous example of how ancestors of one animal lived in different environments. It is interesting that you still can find a vestigial bone in whales of what could be the remaining of a back leg hehe

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"A wolf/rodent thing" is exactly how I'd have said itπŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

See the amount of teeth in that...

Plus whales sure put on a lot of pounds in the last 50 million years...

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It doesn't fit what I think a whale is but I guess they had to evolve from somewhere.

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(Edited)

Wow, this discovery is surprising as well as fascinating. I haven't heard about Pakicetus before and to discover that whales evolved from land-dwellers is truly amazing tbh

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