Official 02 Passage 2

纠错
置顶

The Origins of Cetaceans

纠错

The hind leg of Basilosaurus was a significant find because it showed that Basilosaurus

Click on an oval to select your answer. To choose a different answer,

click one different oval.

  • A
    Lived later than Ambulocetus natans
  • B
    Lived at the same time as Pakicetus
  • C
    Was able to swim well
  • D
    Could not have walked on land
显示答案
正确答案: D

我的笔记 编辑笔记

  • 原文
  • 译文
  • It should be obvious that cetaceans-whales, porpoises, and dolphins-are mammals. They breathe through lungs, not through gills, and give birth to live young. Their streamlined bodies, the absence of hind legs, and the presence of a fluke1 and blowhole2 cannot disguise their affinities with land dwelling mammals. However, unlike the cases of sea otters and pinnipeds (seals, sea lions, and walruses, whose limbs are functional both on land and at sea), it is not easy to envision what the first whales looked like. Extinct but already fully marine cetaceans are known from the fossil record. How was the gap between a walking mammal and a swimming whale bridged? Missing until recently were fossils clearly intermediate, or transitional, between land mammals and cetaceans.



    Very exciting discoveries have finally allowed scientists to reconstruct the most likely origins of cetaceans. In 1979, a team looking for fossils in northern Pakistan found what proved to be the oldest fossil whale. The fossil was officially named Pakicetus in honor of the country where the discovery was made. Pakicetus was found embedded in rocks formed from river deposits that were 52 million years old. The river that formed these deposits was actually not far from an ancient ocean known as the Tethys Sea.



    The fossil consists of a complete skull of an archaeocyte, an extinct group of ancestors of modern cetaceans. Although limited to a skull, the Pakicetus fossil provides precious details on the origins of cetaceans. The skull is cetacean-like but its jawbones lack the enlarged space that is filled with fat or oil and used for receiving underwater sound in modern whales. Pakicetus probably detected sound through the ear opening as in land mammals. The skull also lacks a blowhole, another cetacean adaptation for diving. Other features, however, show experts that Pakicetus is a transitional form between a group of extinct flesh- eating mammals, the mesonychids, and cetaceans. It has been suggested that Pakicetus fed on fish in shallow water and was not yet adapted for life in the open ocean. It probably bred and gave birth on land.



    Another major discovery was made in Egypt in 1989. Several skeletons of another early whale, Basilosaurus, were found in sediments left by the Tethys Sea and now exposed in the Sahara desert. This whale lived around 40 million years ago, 12 million years after Pakicetus. Many incomplete skeletons were found but they included, for the first time in an archaeocyte, a complete hind leg that features a foot with three tiny toes. Such legs would have been far too small to have supported the 50-foot-long Basilosaurus on land. Basilosaurus was undoubtedly a fully marine whale with possibly nonfunctional, or vestigial, hind legs.



    An even more exciting find was reported in 1994, also from Pakistan. The now extinct whale Ambulocetus natans ("the walking whale that swam") lived in the Tethys Sea 49 million years ago. It lived around 3 million years after Pakicetus but 9 million before Basilosaurus. The fossil luckily includes a good portion of the hind legs. The legs were strong and ended in long feet very much like those of a modern pinniped. The legs were certainly functional both on land and at sea. The whale retained a tail and lacked a fluke, the major means of locomotion in modern cetaceans. The structure of the backbone shows, however, that Ambulocetus swam like modern whales by moving the rear portion of its body up and down, even though a fluke was missing. The large hind legs were used for propulsion in water. On land, where it probably bred and gave birth, Ambulocetus may have moved around very much like a modern sea lion. It was undoubtedly a whale that linked life on land with life at sea. . Fluke: the two parts that constitute the large triangular tail of a whale2.


  • 众所周知,鲸类动物是哺乳动物,如鲸鱼、鼠海豚和海豚。它们用肺呼吸,而不是鳃,属于胎生。鲸类动物呈流线型的身体,后腿的消失,尾片和气孔的出现,这些特征都不能掩饰它们和陆生哺乳动物的相似之处。然而,想知道世上第一只鲸长什么样并非易事,不像还原海獭及鳍足类动物(四肢水陆两用如海豹,海狮,海象)的原貌那么简单。一些完全水生的鲸类动物虽然已经灭绝,但仍可通过化石来对它们进行考察。陆栖哺乳动物和海洋鲸类之间有何联系?近期发现的化石已经可以很清晰地帮助人们了解这个问题,以及他们之间的过渡关系。

    科学家们通过一些令人振奋的发现重现了鲸类动物几近真实的起源。1979年,在巴基斯坦北部,一个寻找化石的考察队发掘到了最古老的鲸鱼化石。这块化石被官方命名为 Pakicetus,以纪念人们发现它的地方。这块化石是在一条河的沉积岩中发现的,这条河有5200万年的历史,离古地中海不远.

    Pakicetus包括一个完整原始动物的头盖骨,它的主人是现代鲸类的祖先。尽管只是个头盖骨,但它却提供了研究原始鲸类动物起源的珍贵信息。这个头盖骨和鲸类动物的很像,但它的下颌骨和现代鲸类略有不同,现代鲸类动物的下颌骨中含有额外的空间储存脂肪或者油脂来吸收水下的声音。Pakicetus的主人可能会像陆生哺乳动物那样通过张开的耳朵来探测声音。另外,这个头盖骨没有呼吸孔,而鲸类动物有,这便是鲸类动物为了适应水生环境的另一种适应性表现。然而,专家认为Pakicetus的其它特征表明它们是已灭绝的食肉哺乳动物(中兽科动物)和鲸类动物的过渡型。有人认为Pakicetus靠吃浅水的鱼类为生,未能适应在辽阔的大海里生活。它们很有可能在陆地进行生育繁殖。

    1989年,在埃及有了另一个重大发现。人们在古地中海残留的沉积物中发现了另一类早期鲸鱼Basilosaurus的一些骨骸,这些骨骸如今暴露在撒哈拉大沙漠上。Basilosaurus生活在大约4000万年前,比Pakicetus鲸鱼晚了1200万年。尽管发现的这些骨骼并不完整,但这是专家们第一次在原始动物身上发现完整的后肢,它有三个小脚趾作为的足部特征。可这些后肢还太小,远无法支撑50英尺长的Basilosaurus在陆地行走。因此,Basilosaurus必定是完全水生的鲸鱼,它们的后肢已经不起任何作用,或者说已经退化.

    1994年,巴基斯坦报道了一个更令人兴奋的发现。目前已经灭绝的鲸鱼Ambulocetus natans(可以步行的鲸类)4900万年前曾在古地中海生活过。比Pakicetus晚大约 300万年,比Basilosaurus早 900万年左右。幸运的是,被发现的Ambulocetus natans保留着完整的后肢。它的后肢很强壮,底部有长足,非常像现在的鳍足类动物。这些后肢使得他们既能在陆地行走又能在海里游行。虽然Ambulocetus natans保留了尾巴,但它们缺少现代水生鲸类动物用于行动的主要身体部位——尾片。不过,从Ambulocetus的脊椎结构上可以看出,即使缺少尾片,它们也能像现代鲸鱼那样通过身体背部的上下摆动来游走。大的后肢通常被当作是水中前行的发动机。在它们可能交配繁殖的陆地上,Ambulocetus行动起来非常像现代海狮。毫无疑问,鲸鱼是连接着陆地生命和海洋生命的物种。
  • 官方解析
  • 网友贡献解析
  • 标签
    5 感谢 不懂
    解析

    题目分类:事实信息题

    题干分析:题目中的定位此时hind leg,可以定位到文章的段落的中部。

                     正确选项对应文中的:a complete hind leg that features a foot with three tiny toes. Such legs would have been far too small to have supported the 50-foot-long Basilosaurus on land.

    选项分析:

    A:无,文中没有提到AN;
    B:无,Pakicetus定位过于靠前,秒排;
    C:满,过于绝对了,陆地上行走不便不等于水中游泳很好;

题目讨论

如果对题目有疑问,欢迎来提出你的问题,热心的小伙伴会帮你解答。

最新提问