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03 лютага 2026, 09:09
First amphibian footprints from Jurassic of Asia discovered in Beijing
Photo: Sci.News / iStock
BEIJING, 3 February (BelTA - Xinhua) - A China-led study has
reported the discovery of amphibian track fossils in Middle Jurassic
strata in Beijing, the first such record in Asia. The research has been
published online in the journal Ichnos.
According to experts, the
find not only fills a gap in the study of Jurassic amphibian trace
fossils across Asia, but also provides key evidence for understanding
the paleogeography, paleoecology, and biodiversity of northern China
about 160 million years ago.
The fossils consist of two
footprints preserved on a single slab. They were found on a roadside
slope in Longquan town, Mentougou district in Beijing, forming a linked
fore- and hind-foot pair, said Xing Lida, a dinosaur specialist and
associate professor at the School of Earth Sciences and Resources, China
University of Geosciences (Beijing).
Based on the relative size,
spacing, and roughly aligned orientation of the two impressions,
researchers determined that they were likely made by the same animal in
the course of continuous movement.
One of the impressions,
well-preserved, was identified as the left front footprint of a small
animal, displaying a clear, fan-shaped morphology with four slender,
pointed toes. The entire palm print measures only 1.5 cm in length and
1.3 cm in width.
To extract the maximum amount of information
from these tiny impressions, the researchers employed modern digital
techniques. They used photogrammetric 3D modeling to generate a
high-precision 3D digital model, visually revealing the subtlest surface
features of the impressions and providing a solid data foundation for
morphological analysis.
Through detailed morphological
comparisons and quantitative skeletal-track correlation analysis, the
researchers concluded that the trackmaker most likely belonged to the
salamander suborder.
"This is the first time that amphibian track
fossils have been discovered and scientifically described in Jurassic
strata in China and across Asia," Xing said. Previously, records of
Jurassic vertebrate tracks in the Beijing area were dominated by
dinosaurs and turtles, with no amphibian tracks reported.
This
discovery indicates that during the deposition of the Middle Jurassic
Yaopo Formation, small-sized, land-adapted amphibian groups existed in
the lake-swamp environments of the Beijing area. They coexisted with
abundant ferns, ginkgos, and cycads, forming a complex ecosystem.
It
is worth noting that this important fossil was first discovered by Ni
Jingchen, a Beijing elementary school student and fossil enthusiast, who
came across it on a rocky slope in Mentougou while exploring in early
2025.
"This is a vivid example of public participation in
paleontological discovery. It reminds us that the profound chapters of
Earth's history are sometimes preserved in the subtlest traces of the
surrounding rocks, waiting to be discovered and interpreted by those
with a keen eye," Xing said.