A coraciiform-like bird quadrate from the Early Eocene Tingamarra local fauna of Queensland, Australia
Andrzej Elzanowski A C and Walter E. Boles BA Museum and Institute of Zoology, Polish Academy of Sciences, 64 Wilcza Street, 00-679 Warszawa, Poland.
B Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, Sydney, 6 College Street, NSW 2010, Australia.
C Corresponding author. Email: elzanowski@miiz.waw.pl
Emu 115(2) 110-116 https://doi.org/10.1071/MU14084
Submitted: 9 September 2014 Accepted: 11 January 2015 Published: 2 April 2015
Abstract
A fragmentary quadrate from the earliest Eocene Tingamarra local fauna of Murgon, Queensland, combines characters of the coraciiform birds and their closest relatives, a separate pterygoid facet on the orbital process (a feature unknown in this clade), and similarities to the Upupiformes (Upupidae and Phoeniculidae). The new fossil provides the first Paleogene, and thus the oldest, record of the coraciiform-like birds from the Southern Hemisphere. The Tingamarra bird may well represent one of the named families of Paleogene birds whose quadrates remain largely unknown. A great variation of pneumaticity-related features among the coraciiform birds reveals morphogenetic instability in the development of pneumatic diverticula from the tympanic cavity.
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