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Remains of giant ancient whales 37 million years ago found in the Sahara Desert in Egypt and they have legs

by Stephen King 2 Comments

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The arid desert sands of Egypt are unlikely to be home to whales.

However, dozens of fossilized remains of prehistoric ancestors of the giant sea mammals have been discovered in the Egyptian Sahara.

Among them is a 37 million-year-old intact skeleton of a legged whale measuring more than 65 feet (20 meters) in length.

Dozens of fossilized whale bones have emerged from the Wati El Hitan in the Egyptian desert (pictured) and form the centre piece of a new museum that has been opened. Among them is an intact 37 million-year-old skeleton of a legged form of whale that measures more than 65 feet (20 metres) long

Scientists are learning more about how modern whales evolved from land mammals thanks to the fossils.

A $2.17 billion (£1.5 billion) museum in the Valley of the Whales, known as Wadi Al-Hitan, has now officially opened.

The region was once covered by a vast prehistoric ocean, but it has since vanished as sea levels have dropped and landmasses have shifted.

Many of the fossils are now protected by a sand-colored dome-shaped building that serves as the museum.

The largest intact Basilosaurus isis whale fossil – an early formed of ‘legged whale’ – is one of the key attractions at the new Fossils and Climate Change Museum in Egypt’s Valley of the Whales
The largest intact Basulosaurus isis whale fossil was discovered in the shifting sands of the Egyptian desert. The $2.17 billion (£1.5 billion) museum was built around the fossils to help protect and preserve them

Prehistoric tools – which attest to the presence of stone-age humans in the area thousands of years ago – are displayed in glass boxes alongside fossilised remains from the fossils.

The architect of the new Fossils and Climate Change Museum, Gabriel Mikhail, said he designed the structure to blend in with its desert surroundings.

‘When you build something so beautiful and unique, it has to blend in with its surroundings… or it would be a crime against nature,’ he explained.

‘We are confident that visitors will come,’ says the organization.

THE WHALE SKELETON THAT REVEALS HOW MAN EVOLVED TO WALK ON TWO LEGS 

A whale that swam hundreds of miles up an African river after taking a wrong turn 17 million years ago is helping shed light on a key moment in human evolution.

Palaeontologists discovered the fossilised remains of the ancient ancestor to modern beaked whales in the middle of one of the harshest desert areas of Turkana, Kenya.

It has allowed scientists to pinpoint when the landscape in east Africa began to change as the land around the Great Rift Valley began to rise up.

This was a crucial moment in human evolution from primates as it created the dry open habitats that led our ape-like ancestors to walk upright for the first time. 

They say that for the whale to have travelled so far inland in a river the area must have been much wetter, far flatter and dominated by forests. 

Professor Louis Jacobs, a vertebrate palaeontologist at Southern Methodist University in Dallas who led the study, said: ‘The whale was stranded up river at a time when east Africa was at sea level and was covered with forest and jungle.

‘As that part of the continent rose up, that caused the climate to become drier and drier. So over millions of years, forest gave way to grasslands.

‘Primates evolved to adapt to grasslands and dry country. And that’s when – in human evolution – the primates started to walk upright.’ 

Egypt’s ministers hope that the new museum will help to revitalize the country’s struggling tourism industry, which has suffered as a result of the long-running Islamic insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula.

The suspected terror bombing that brought down the Russian airliner over Sinai last October, killing all 224 people on board, dealt another blow to Egypt’s tourism industry.

The Islamic State terrorist organization has claimed responsibility for the attack.

A visitor views the largest intact Basulosaurus isis whale fossil (pictured), which is on display at the Wati El Hitan Fossils and Climate Change Museum on the opening day. The fossils have proved invaluable to palaeontologists as they try to piece together the evolutionary history of modern-day sea mammals
The giant fossil is one of the most complete Basulosaurus isis whale fossil’s to have been found. The species has earned the name ‘walking whale’ due to leg like limbs that are thought to have been a key evolutionary stage as whales evolved from land mammals
Egyptian Army soldiers stand guard outside the Wati El Hitan Fossils and Climate Change Museum a UNESCO natural World Heritage site (pictured). The Egyptian authorities are hoping the new museum may help to reinvigorate the country’s struggling tourism industry
The sand-colored, dome-shaped museum is barely discernible in the breathtaking desert landscape that stretches all around (pictured)

The large Basilosaurus and the smaller Dorudon are among the fossilized whales found in the desert. They are both thought to be early whale species that help to explain how they evolved.

However, Environment Minister Khaled Fahmy warned against misinterpreting the museum’s opening as a “complete endorsement of the theory of evolution,” which is incompatible with Islam.

‘That is a completely different matter,’ he explained. ‘We remain committed to our Islamic belief system.’

Architects designed the museum to blend into the surrounding desert but it is also hoped it will help to protect the rare fossils
The site where the fossils were found in the Egyptian Sahara (pictured) was once covered by ocean millions of years ago when these giant creatures would have ruled the seas
The fossilised bones have lain preserved under the sand in Wadi El Hitan (pictured) for millions of years and give a rare insight into the creatures that lived there when it was covered by ocean millions of years ago when sea levels were higher
While some of the fossils have been moved inside the museum, others can still be seen where they were found among the sand (pictured)

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Filed Under: Trends Worldwide Tagged With: ancient, desert, egypt, found,, Giant, have, legs, million, remains, sahara, they, trends, Whales, worldwide, years

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Comments

  1. Marvin clark says

    January 27, 2023 at 2:50 am

    I have found mammalian fossil bones in tributaries leading to Tulare Lake in the center of the San Joaquin valley. When the valley was once covered with water through the delta. I would love to search that are before it is developed. Also note mammoth bones found E of Woodlake in apparent coves of the ocean near current foothills. Willing to connect with paleantologists

    Reply
  2. Vickie says

    January 27, 2023 at 6:33 am

    Very interested thanks for sharing.

    Reply

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