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Reconstitution of the falcatid shark, one of the three cladodontomorph shark species discovered, in the depths of an ocean [Credit: Nature/AFP] |
Theories for the cause of the catastrophe include an asteroid impact that smothered the planet in dust which obscured the Sun and shrivelled vegetation, or a fierce period of vulcanism that caused a lethal mixture of acid rain and global warming.
Among the creatures thought to have disappeared were Cladodontomorph sharks, distant cousins of modern sharks, which sported jaws with several rows of tiny, sharp teeth.
But now a team from Geneva's Natural History Museum and France's Montpellier University uncovered six such teeth in sediment near the southern French town of Montpellier from the early Cretaceous period, when the area would have been under water.
The teeth, less than 2 millimetres in size, were from three different Cladodontomorph species, now extinct, which lived about 135 million years ago.
"Our finding shows that this lineage survived mass extinctions most likely by... using deep-sea refuge environments during catastrophic events," said the study.
Source: AFP [October 29, 2013]