An evolutionary rethink

Updated August 21 2015 - 1:13pm, first published June 6 2015 - 3:00am
Analysis of a fractured and partially healed radius (front-leg bone) from Ossinodus pueri, a large, primitive, four-legged (tetrapod), salamander-like animal is causing fossil scientists to reconsider the evolution of land-dwelling vertebrate animals. Photo courtesy Queensland Museum.
Analysis of a fractured and partially healed radius (front-leg bone) from Ossinodus pueri, a large, primitive, four-legged (tetrapod), salamander-like animal is causing fossil scientists to reconsider the evolution of land-dwelling vertebrate animals. Photo courtesy Queensland Museum.

A 333-million year old broken bone is causing fossil scientists to reconsider the evolution of land-dwelling vertebrate animals, says a team of palaeontologists, including QUT evolutionary biologist Dr Matthew Phillips, and colleagues at Monash University and Queensland Museum.

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