Eons Roundup 13

I haven’t posted any PBS Eons commissions here for quite a while, so let’s catch up a bit of the backlog:

The Cretaceous mammals Repenomamus robustus and Repenomamus giganticus, from “When Mammals Only Went Out At Night”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqZONKXWPfw


A carcass of the whale Borealodon, from “How Ancient Whales May Have Changed the Deep Ocean”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1vb00-gcdtA


And the early vertebrates Haikouichthys and Myllokunmingia, from “Why Sour May Be The Oldest Taste”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXgd_cNZSvk

Borealodon

Modern mysticete whales all have baleen plates in their mouths, but before the evolution of these specialized filter-feeding structures the early members of their lineage still had toothy jaws.

Borealodon osedax here was one of those “toothed mysticetes”, living about 30-28 million years ago during the mid-Oligocene off the coast of Washington state, USA.

Unlike modern baleen whales it was small, about the size of a modern porpoise at around 2m long (6’6″), and the wear on its multi-cusped teeth suggest it was a predator taking slicing bites of fish – possibly using suction-assisted feeding like its close relatives the aetiocetids.

Its fossilized remains are also a rare example of an ancient whale fall, with characteristic bore holes in its bones from Osedax worms.