It's official: There really was a giant, flightless bird with a head the size of a horse's wandering about in the winter
twilight1 of the high Arctic some 53 million years ago. The
confirmation2 comes from a new study by researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing and the University of Colorado
Boulder3 that describes the first and only fossil evidence from the Arctic of a massive bird known as Gastornis. The evidence is a single fossil toe bone of the 6-foot tall, several-hundred-pound bird from Ellesmere Island above the Arctic Circle. The bone is nearly a dead ringer to fossil toe bones from the huge bird discovered in Wyoming and which date to roughly the same time.
The Gastornis (formerly Diatryma) fossil from Ellesmere Island has been discussed by paleontologists since it was collected in the 1970s and appears on a few lists of the
prehistoric4 fauna5 there, said Professor Thomas Stidham of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. But this is the first time the bone has been closely examined and described, he said. Gastornis fossils also have been found in Europe and Asia.
"We knew there were a few bird fossils from up there, but we also knew they were extremely rare," said CU-Boulder Associate Professor Jaelyn Eberle of geological sciences a study co-author who conducts research on fossil mammals,
reptiles6 and fishes. In addition to the Gastornis bone from Ellesmere, another scientist reported seeing a fossil footprint there, probably from a large flightless bird, although its specific location
remains7 unknown, Eberle said.
A paper by Stidham and Eberle appears in the most recent issue of Scientific Reports, an open access, weekly journal from the publishers of Nature.